Sam,you are wrong
Sam,
No matter how one tries to illustrate how Klosowski"s training matched almost in every particular with that of England,up to and including the 1850"s-[at earliest], you reject it while apparently refusing to go find out for yourself what actually happened in training for surgery here.
ALL SURGICAL TRAINING IN THE UK BEGAN WITH A FIVE YEAR APPRENTICESHIP no matter where you lived,whether in a tiny village in the North of England and were apprenticed for five years to the
local doctor or you lived in Lambeth and were as close as you get to Guy"s hospital nevertheless you DID NOT serve your 5 year apprenticeship,the precursor to all surgical training AT GUYS- that came after the five years were up when you followed it with a brief practical course at a hospital.That was how training in surgery began in the UK up until at least 1850 and probably up until the beginning of 1870.
I spoke about the cultural/ technological background to Poland,[Warsaw actually],because you seemed to be operating under the delusion that all things Polish were backward and seem to be so determined to prove Klosowski had inferior training that you posted a picture of a few huts to show where he had come from which is just so misleading and a bit puerile quite frankly.
I have been doing some research myself into the comparative
training that went on in England and its very clear that England was very much the backward country regarding the development of surgery ,building of hospitals,development of medical breakthroughs, well up until the 20th century .Before then all students who could afford it studied in Paris which had taken over from Vienna in in the 1840"s and by the 1890"s was the centre for all medicine and studies in medicine.
The jewel among all hospitals was Vienna"s Algemeine Kankenhaus [general hospital] up until well into the 19th century .As part of Emperor Joseph"s grand design for modernising the Hapsburg Empire, hospitals were also built in Olmutz, Linz and Prague.New infirmaries rapidly grew up at around the same time in Berlin, and the Ukraine where the huge Obukhov hospital had been built ,later called the Catherine the Great Hospital . All the most radical and exploratory surgery happened in and around Vienna and in these Eastern European hospitals,of which the Prago would have been a part .
Britain at that point in time was "well behind "by comparison and remained so until the last century!
However by the 1840"s France began to take the lead in pioneering developments in Europe ,when anaesthesia was introduced.
It was also in this period that many more records began to flood in of successful caesarians where the mother survived .Only a handful of mothers had survived up until the 1790"s ,whereas by the 1840"s records of women surviving caesarians all over Europe ,including Eastern Europe, began to appear .see Cambridge Illustrated History of medicine.Roy Porter isbn 0-521-44211-7
Originally posted by Sam Flynn
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Sam,
No matter how one tries to illustrate how Klosowski"s training matched almost in every particular with that of England,up to and including the 1850"s-[at earliest], you reject it while apparently refusing to go find out for yourself what actually happened in training for surgery here.
ALL SURGICAL TRAINING IN THE UK BEGAN WITH A FIVE YEAR APPRENTICESHIP no matter where you lived,whether in a tiny village in the North of England and were apprenticed for five years to the
local doctor or you lived in Lambeth and were as close as you get to Guy"s hospital nevertheless you DID NOT serve your 5 year apprenticeship,the precursor to all surgical training AT GUYS- that came after the five years were up when you followed it with a brief practical course at a hospital.That was how training in surgery began in the UK up until at least 1850 and probably up until the beginning of 1870.
I spoke about the cultural/ technological background to Poland,[Warsaw actually],because you seemed to be operating under the delusion that all things Polish were backward and seem to be so determined to prove Klosowski had inferior training that you posted a picture of a few huts to show where he had come from which is just so misleading and a bit puerile quite frankly.
I have been doing some research myself into the comparative
training that went on in England and its very clear that England was very much the backward country regarding the development of surgery ,building of hospitals,development of medical breakthroughs, well up until the 20th century .Before then all students who could afford it studied in Paris which had taken over from Vienna in in the 1840"s and by the 1890"s was the centre for all medicine and studies in medicine.
The jewel among all hospitals was Vienna"s Algemeine Kankenhaus [general hospital] up until well into the 19th century .As part of Emperor Joseph"s grand design for modernising the Hapsburg Empire, hospitals were also built in Olmutz, Linz and Prague.New infirmaries rapidly grew up at around the same time in Berlin, and the Ukraine where the huge Obukhov hospital had been built ,later called the Catherine the Great Hospital . All the most radical and exploratory surgery happened in and around Vienna and in these Eastern European hospitals,of which the Prago would have been a part .
Britain at that point in time was "well behind "by comparison and remained so until the last century!
However by the 1840"s France began to take the lead in pioneering developments in Europe ,when anaesthesia was introduced.
It was also in this period that many more records began to flood in of successful caesarians where the mother survived .Only a handful of mothers had survived up until the 1790"s ,whereas by the 1840"s records of women surviving caesarians all over Europe ,including Eastern Europe, began to appear .see Cambridge Illustrated History of medicine.Roy Porter isbn 0-521-44211-7
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