Article ID: CBB088329294

Discussing Patients in Private and in Print: The Records of an Eighteenth-Century Dispensary (2023)

unapi

This essay studies the variation between the ways in which physicians wrote about their patients in private and their presentation of these case histories to the wider world in print. Focusing particularly on the case of Andrew Duncan, who founded the Edinburgh Public Dispensary in 1776, this paper will investigate the differences detailed in Duncan's handwritten case notes with the ways in which he chose to portray these patient cases in his published works. This paper will argue that not only does Duncan demonstrate a tendency to exaggerate the positive outcomes from his treatments but also his published works simplify the diagnoses performed on dispensary patients. The self-editing which is apparent in his medical publishing includes the omission of details of the range of complaints individual patients suffer from and exclusion of certain disease categories, including hysteria, from the printed record. This paper will argue that a historiographical focus on printed material such as disease studies and annual reports can result in the distortion of information regarding diagnosis, medical outcomes, and the relationship between patient and practitioner during the eighteenth century.

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Article Ashleigh Blackwood; Helen Williams (2023) Writing Doctors and Writing Health in the Long Eighteenth Century. Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies (pp. 3-20). unapi

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https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB088329294/

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Authors & Contributors
Eddy, Matthew D.
Emerson, Roger L.
Allen, David Elliston
Atiyah, Michael F.
Casteel, Eric Grier
Chalmers, John
Journals
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
Arbor: Ciencia, Pensamiento y Cultura
British Journal for the History of Science
Chemical Heritage
Historical Journal
Intellectual History Review
Publishers
Ashgate
Ashgate Publishing
Edinburgh University Press
John Donald
National Museums of Scotland
University of California, Los Angeles
Concepts
Natural history
Societies; institutions; academies
Chemistry
Medicine
Medical schools
Earth sciences
People
Duncan, Andrew
Walker, John
Black, Joseph
Boerhaave, Herman
Franklin, Benjamin
Linnaeus, Carolus
Time Periods
18th century
19th century
Enlightenment
17th century
20th century, early
21st century
Places
Edinburgh (Scotland)
Scotland
Great Britain
Africa
Paris (France)
Latin America
Institutions
University of Edinburgh
University of Glasgow
University of St. Andrews
Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh
National Health Services--Great Britain
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