Guest guest Posted June 17, 2004 Report Share Posted June 17, 2004 Medscape articles are mainly directed at health professionals. If you wish to view the articles, you need to register at www.medscape.com http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/479809 " Diagnostic Imaging and Vascular Embolization for Uterine Leiomyomas " by Gisela C. Mueller, M.D.; ph J. Gemmete, M.D.; Ruth C. , M.D., M.S. Semin Reprod Med 22(2):131-142, 2004. Posted 8 June 2004 http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/479892 " J. n Sims, the Father of Gynecology: Hero or Villain? " S. Sartin, MD South Med J 97(5):500-505, 2004. http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/480354 " Symptom Patterns May Suggest Ovarian Cancer " Laurie Barclay, MD Vega, MD, FAAFP Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 17, 2004 Report Share Posted June 17, 2004 > > http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/479892 > " J. n Sims, the Father of Gynecology: Hero or Villain? " > S. Sartin, MD > South Med J 97(5):500-505, 2004. " Though modern critics may not wish to remove Sims' monuments from their current homes, they would not be remiss in asking to have monuments erected beside them to Lucy, Betsey and Anarcha. " I couldn't agree more with this closing statement. After plowing through much of Sims's life works from his writings and his biography, I came to the conclusion long ago that he was " ...a typical man of southern times... " . However, I don't exactly see this as a positive statement. Sims fled the south during the Civil War and practiced in Europe to escape it all -- to the point of fearing he wouldn't be allowed to return to America when all was said and done. He disagreed vehemently with the freeing of slaves and wrote in great detail in " The Story of My Life " of his many travels and years abroad to escape the war. " My sentiments I can not help, for I lived forty years of my life at the South. The companions of my youth are the leaders of the great Southern rebellion. My father, now seventy-three years of age, is one of its soldiers; our whole family are in arms; your father and mother, my mother, and one of our beloved children have graves on Southern soil, and how under heaven could we be otherwise than we are, unless lost to all sense of humanity. " His wife and children often stayed behind, for the most part, and also exemplified his patriarchal perspective of their role in his life. Regardless of how loving he wrote of his wife, it would seem he was forever leaving her behind to tend to their children while he journeyed long and far to further his name and both capitalize upon AND escape his legacy of experimentation on the slaves of the south. He became famous for the procedures he perfected while the suffering slaves he toiled on were all but forgotten. In 1862, he relocated his family to Europe to escape the civil war entirely and build his practice in safer environs. His resignation from the Women's Charity Hospital he created was all about his ego. His experimentations and show-off surgeries were deemed, by the women's board who helped him to build that facility, as unethical. While he is credited with developing the first Women's Hospital of its kind -- the truth is that he did so only because of jealousy and competition and exclusion from other hospitals of the time. And, if it were not for society WOMEN who came to his aid in making the idea a reality, it would never have happened with Sims at the helm. Sims' career was built on the backside of women in more ways than simply those which Lucy, Betsey, and Anarcha represent. His thanks to ANY of these women is nonexistent in his writings or his legacy. In fact, the only woman he seemed to have any respect for whatsoever was simply his wife. From MY perspective, the statues of Sims and great honors placed upon him in the annals of gynecology are overblown and represent a manner of embracement by the male gynecological community, over the years, that is wholly unhealthy in it's perspective of women. Women of color. Women who are without means. Women are are WITH means. Simply women. It is a glorification of the unethical treatment of women that many gynecologists take to heart and proceed with that legacy in their work today, as well. Buried within a tribute to Dr. Sims upon his death are the following words of Dr. W. O. Baldwin: ********************** " Gentlemen, there is one page in the life of this great man, one scene in the living panorama of which he constituted a part, that I would fain not disturb, and one on which I would prefer to drop the mantle of oblivion, were it not that it is already a matter of history, and perhaps it is due to the memory of Dr. Sims that I should refer to it. I alluded to the night when, as one of the surgeons, he last met the governors of the Woman's Hospital, and which closed forever his connection with that institution. It is said that republics are ungrateful, and it therefore should not be surprising if even the governors of charitable institutions should sometimes forget their greatest benefactors, and smite the cheek of him whose hand was chiefly instrumental in calling them into existence. The Woman's Hospital was Dr. Sims's bantling. The creation of its germ and the conception of its possibilites were the outgrowth of those discoveries which emanated from his brain alone, and its final success was due to his untiring exertions. He was proud of his work; he was proud of the child of his own life, and when the Woman's Hospital was completed he regarded it as the largest pearl in all his greatness--the central jewel in his crown of glory. But while it was the glory of his life it was its humiliation too! Those governors, who were in fact but little more than figureheads so far as the privileges and duties of the surgeons were concerned, had taken upon themselves the privilege of regulating the affairs of the operating-room, and of saying to the surgeons that only fifteen guests or spectators should be permitted to be present at any one operation. Dr. Sims took this occasion for telling them that he had not obeyed this order of theirs, and would not, and that if they insisted on enforcing this rule his resignation was at their disposal. He claimed the right to invite such numbers as his own judgment and inclination might dictate. Their action in assuming to restrict his privileges, in this respect, he regarded as without authority. To a man of honor their action must have been offensive. In effect it accused him of being ignorant of the surgeon's duties in the sick-room, and of wanting in a proper regard for the feelings and sensibilities of his patients. All this made it insulting and galling to him, and especially as he knew it to be an unauthorized invasion of his own prerogatives, inherent to the office which he held, and altogether outside of their accredited duties. All the world over, the creed of common courtesy which exists between the laity and profession makes the physician the autocrat of the sick-chamber, and the privilege of the surgeon, as to whom he will invite to his operating table or room, has never before been restricted. If it was wrong to invite all who desired to attend, or all whom the surgeon might wish to witness his operation, why invite fifteen? It was not necessary to invite any! The hospital service afforded all necessary assistance. If it would not offend the sensibilities of a woman to have fifteen guests present, would it shock her modesty very greatly to have eighteen, or twenty, or fifty, or a hundred, or any number that the room could accommodate conveniently? Besides, it is well known that the patients in this hospital are rarely ever seen by the spectators until after they have been placed upon the operating-table and under the influence of an anaesthetic, when the the table is rolled into position. Another and even stronger reason exists against this restriction. To serve all the purposes in the interest of woman of which his hospital was capable, it was doubtless intended, or in contemplation by Dr. Sims from the first, that it should be used as a school, so far as possible, for teaching physicians from the country, or city, or other cities, or from other States or nations, who might temporarily be in New York for the purpose of studying that class of diseases, and would like to see these operations. But suppose these governors could find nothing in all these facts to make them retrace their steps, could they find nothing in the fact that Dr. Sims thought they were in error, and wished them to reconsider their unjust and unwise action? Could they not have conceded something to the opinions of the man who had created the hospital, who had devoted fifteen or twenty of the best years of his life to its service, who had passed many weary days and sleepless nights in the promotion of its interest, and had carried it upon his heart as none of them had ever done? They knew he had placed himself in a position, in relation to the order which they had issued, from which he could not recede without loss of dignity or even honor; they knew he did not wish to sever his connectin with the hospital, and they knew he did not wish his resignation accepted, and yet, with a heartless and cruel inflexibility, they refused to abolish their miserable order and accepted his resignation; thus stabbing him in the most vital spot of his life, and mortifying him as nothing else had ever done. In this difficulty Dr. Sims had the sympathy of a large portion of the medical men of American. And, as an expression of their sentiments in this direction, the American Medical Association, at its very next meeting, unanimously elected him its president. " ************ Believe it or not, this is wholly representative of similar political antics being carried on today. One of ACOG's most recent presidents was the former chair of Duke University's gynecology department. He was elected after his battle with interventional radiologists over fibroid embolization at Duke erupted publicly with his writing a scathing letter to an IR which proclaimed that Duke's gyn department would NEVER refer a woman for fibroid embolization. If it were not for the women governors overseeing The Woman's Hospital attempting to force a consideration of ethics in medicine over the likes of Sims, precisely where would we be today? I shudder to think of it. As it stands, far too many gynecologists are walking, talking emulations of Sims' attitude and behaviors towards women. Yes, it's time we balanced the picture of history with honoring those women who sacrificed greatly for all of us. Lucy, Betsey and Anarcha deserve more than simply a mention in Sims' biography. So do the women governors who helped to build The Woman's Hospital and then later reigned in Sims with a voice of ethical considerations for the patients they served there. It's time for balancing the weight of medical history with the development of a memorial to these women. And, it's simply the right thing to do. Carla Dionne Executive Director National Uterine Fibroids Foundation Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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