Pain and Surgery in England, circa 1620-circa 1740

Medical History
Katherine A Walker

Abstract

The scholarship on the discussion and role of pain in early modern English surgery is limited. Scholars have given little consideration to how surgeons described and comprehended pain in their patients' bodies in early modern England, including how these understandings connected to notions of the humours, nerves and sex difference. This article focuses on the attention that surgeons paid to pain in their published and manuscript casebooks and manuals available in English, circa 1620-circa 1740. Pain was an important component of surgery in early modern England, influencing diagnosis, treatment and technique. Surgeons portrayed a complex and multi-dimensional understanding of their patients' bodies in pain, which was further connected to their portrayals of their professional ability.

References

Oct 1, 1990·Journal of Pain and Symptom Management·D E Joranson
Dec 7, 1996·British Dental Journal·D J Spary
Oct 20, 2001·Journal of the History of the Neurosciences·W T Clower
Sep 10, 2002·Journal of Pediatric Nursing·Shira Katz
Jun 29, 2005·Social History of Medicine : the Journal of the Society for the Social History of Medicine·Wendy D Churchill
Mar 18, 2008·Bulletin of the History of Medicine·Alisha Michelle Rankin

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Methods Mentioned

BETA
amputation
amputations
Extraction

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