Historical gout

Date:
1947-1955
Reference:
SA/HEB/E/1/5
Part of:
Heberden Collection
  • Archives and manuscripts

About this work

Description

Newspaper cuttings making reference to scientific and non-scientific treatments for gout and caricatures of the medical profession
Notes on the purpose of diagnosis and physician practice over time
Correspondence regarding the medical practice of Sir Dyce Duckworth 1840-1928, written by his son Arthur Dyce Duckworth to Copeman in 1955.
Views on physical medicine by Dr Michael Mason, 1948, expressed in a letter to Copeman.

Publication/Creation

1947-1955

Physical description

1 file

Biographical note

According to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Sir Dyce Duckworth was a high profile Victorian physician with an interest in gout. He worked in Edinburgh and spent some time in naval medical service. He was appointed as Medical Tutor at St Bart's Hospital in London in 1865 and followed a medical and teaching career thereafter. He was also a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, vice president of the Royal British Nurses Association and President of the Clinical Society.
He was also an exponent of the art of medicine and feared that this would be lost if medicine was seen as an exact science. He made some contributions to medical literature but his chief work was his Treatise on Gout (1889), which was popular at the time and was translated into French and German.

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