Pioneers of surgical hygiene
Quentin Cooper and guests discuss how hospital cleanliness transformed medicine in the 19th century
The Hungarian obstetrician Ignaz Semmelweis, born 200 years ago this month, saved the lives of hundreds, possibly thousands, of new mothers with his forward-looking ideas about hospital hygiene. He insisted that junior doctors working for him wash their hands in chlorinated lime solution before examining expectant mothers. This simple procedure reduced mortality by something like 90 per cent at the Vienna maternity ward that he was in charge of. Many more deaths could have been prevented had other physicians followed his advice without delay. So why did many in the medical profession resist not just Semmelweis's findings but also similar ideas of his fellow hygiene pioneers, such as Joseph Lister?
Quentin Cooper discusses the beginnings of surgical cleanliness with Dr. Sonia Horn from Vienna University, Dr. Andrew Cunningham from Cambridge University and Prof. Michael Worboys from the University of Manchester.
Photo: presurgery sanitization. (PeopleImages/Getty Images)
Last on
More episodes
Clip
-
Transforming hospital surgery with carbolic acid
Duration: 01:19
Broadcasts
- Sat 7 Jul 2018 19:06GMT成人快手 World Service except Australasia, East and Southern Africa, News Internet & West and Central Africa
- Tue 10 Jul 2018 17:06GMT成人快手 World Service Australasia
- Tue 10 Jul 2018 23:06GMT成人快手 World Service except News Internet
Featured in...
Health, medicine and the body—The Forum
The people and discoveries that changed how we deal with our physical health
Do you think political or business leaders need to be charismatic? Or do you prefer highly competent but somewhat stern people?
Podcast
-
The Forum
The programme that explains the present by exploring the past