List Price

$14.95

Textbook Details

  • ISBN:
    039332625X
  • ISBN-13:
    9780393326253
  • PUB. DATE:
    November 2004
  • PUBLISHER:
    Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
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Doctors' Plague: Germs, Childbed Fever, and the Strange Story of Ignac Semmelweis (Great Discoveries Series) by Sherwin B. Nuland

$14.95 List Price
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Customer Reviews

Still an important story - also in these times!by Anonymous

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Very entertaining to read, and a still very important story. We doctors & nurses still need to remember the possibility of contamination - think also of the MRSA these days. I read several stories about Ignaz Semmelweis, and it keeps fascinating me. This story had definitely new points of view on his character.

Overview -

Doctors' Plague

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: November 2004
  • Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
  • Sales Rank: 489,382

Synopsis

Surgeon, scholar, best-selling author, Sherwin B. Nuland tells the strange story of Ignác Semmelweis with urgency and the insight gained from his own studies and clinical experience. Ignác Semmelweis is remembered for the now-commonplace notion that doctors must wash their hands before examining patients. In mid-nineteenth-century Vienna, however, this was a subversive idea. With deaths from childbed fever exploding, Semmelweis discovered that doctors themselves were spreading the disease. While his simple reforms worked immediately—childbed fever in Vienna all but disappeared—they brought down upon Semmelweis the wrath of the establishment, and led to his tragic end.

The New York Times

Like Semmelweis himself, Nuland's book is short, intense and single-minded, and these larger themes and implications are left teeming underneath the text, for readers to peer in closely and uncover. ''To receive his due of honor,'' Nuland writes, Semmelweis ''had to be rediscovered.'' The Doctors' Plague succeeds for exactly that reason: in telling the story of childbed fever, Nuland has managed to rediscover a critical moment in the history of medicine, the anxieties of which, although somewhat attenuated, persist today. — Siddhartha Mukherjee

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Biography













Sherwin B. Nuland, author of seven books, including the National Book Award-winning How We Die, is clinical professor of surgery at the Yale University School of Medicine. He lives in Connecticut.