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Title: Thematic PowerPoint Chapters 10-18


1
Thematic PowerPoint Chapters 10-18
  • By Angela Schoonover

2
Chapters 10-12
3
Outline
  • Chapter 10
  • "Clinton's Ditch"
  • required tons of manpower
  • used to use local farmers, but malaria hit work
    force in summer of 1819
  • they were replaced by Irish laborers who were
    more reliable if they survived

4
Outline Contd
  • Chapter 11
  • Mortality rates for slave children under 5 were
    twice those of white children of the same age
    group
  • Reasons
  • black women not given adequate nutrition during
    pregnancy
  • they were worked too hard
  • were too frequently pregnant (commonly have 6-8
    kids at 18 month intervals)

5
Outline Contd
  • Malaria and infectious disease like yellow fever
    and cholera were endemic in the South
  • the life expectancy in 1850 for whites- 40-43
    years for African Americans 30-33 years
  • 20 or more of the slave labor force on most
    plantations were sick at any given time
  • slave owners believed slaves were "malingering"
  • They didnt realize that adequate diet, warm
    housing, and basic sanitation might have
    prevented diseases
  • People knew so little about nutrition, a slave
    master accused mothers of killing their own
    infants because the mortality rate was so high

6
Outline Contd
  • Chapter 12
  • Dramatic fall in birth rate from 1800-1900 went
    from average of 7 children to only 4 children
  • people were realizing for economic reasons and
    constraints they couldnt have an unlimited
    number of kids
  • protection not commonly used because it was
    associated with prostitution and trying not to
    spread disease
  • instead they used abstinence or infrequent
    intercourse
  • if abstinence didnt work, surgical abortions
    could be performed
  • widely advertised after 1830
  • popular because they were much more effective
    than the herbal practices shared between women
    that may or may not have worked
  • mainly used by middle class women looking to
    limit family size
  • estimated that one in four pregnancies were
    aborted from 1840 to 1860
  • became so popular, it was basically considered a
    preventative measure
  • 1860 20 states made abortions illegal

7
Outline Contd
  • Medicine from 1800-1850
  • first American pharmacopeia published in 1820
  • consisted of mainly herbal medicines
  • had a few inorganic compounds with calomel
    (mercury) being a favorite among doctors
  • midwifery thrived during times of war because
    doctors were heavily needed for the war, leaving
    midwives to fill the hole doctors left behind
  • nursing was, for the most part, a man's job, but
    when dealing with the Yellow Fever epidemics,
    sometimes slaves were hired to be nurses because
    they were immune from the disease
  • Doctors didn't like midwives very much and tried
    to put them out of business

8
Outline Contd
  • in Philadelphia 1815 there were 21 women who said
    they were midwives by 1824, the number dwindled
    to 6
  • doctors would claim hospitals were more sterile
    than midwives, but midwives would always wash
    their hands between patients- a practice that was
    rarely, if ever, seen by doctors
  • doctors could spread disease patient to patient
    in a hospital because of lack of hygiene
  • Hydropathy
  • believed in the curative powers of water
    (personal hygiene habits somewhat realized and
    required)
  • Thomsonian
  • put the medicine into the hands of the common
    people
  • founded by Samuel Thomson after 6 different
    doctors gave 6 different remedies to his sick
    wife
  • he said the cure and medicine should be left with
    the person because they know what medicine will
    work best on them
  • Medical Licensing
  • The Medical Practices Act was enacted in the very
    early 19th century
  • fined people practicing medicine without a
    license 25
  • people thought this was stifling their rights and
    in 1807 the act was modified so it wasn't
    repealed
  • the fine was lowered and the definition of an
    irregular physician hardly met anyone
  • a similar bill was filled in 1832 by Connecticut
  • Homeopathy
  • developed in 1796 by Samuel Hahnemann but didnt
    find its way to America until 1825
  • sort of holistic medicine nutrition, exercise,
    minimal medicine, and human relationships
  • one of the basic beliefs is with just a hint of
    help, the human body can heal itself

9
Key Terms
  • malingering-to pretend illness, esp. in order to
    shirk one's duty, avoid work, etc
  • pharmacopeia- a book published usually under the
    jurisdiction of the government and containing a
    list of drugs, their formulas, methods for making
    medicinal preparations, requirements and tests
    for their strength and purity, and other related
    information
  • hydropathy- the curing of disease by the
    internal and external use of water
  • Thomsonian- believed medicine should be at the
    hands of the people
  • Medical Licensing Act- the fight to control who
    could treat patients. A form of the Medical
    Licensing Act was passed in all the states except
    2, but they all got repealed because of
    protesters like the Thomsonians

10
Identifying People
  • Samuel Thomson
  • founded Thomsonian- the belief that the medicine
    should be in the hands of the common people. Was
    a force to be reckoned with when trying to pass
    the Medical Licensing Laws in the states
  • Samuel Hahnemann
  • founded the belief of Homeopathy in 1796 even
    though it wouldnt show up in America until 1825.
    Had sort of a holistic approach to healing and
    believed with a pinch of help. the body could
    heal itself

11
Multiple Choice Quiz
  • Question 1
  • Which of the following was untrue about
    Clinton's Ditch?
  • It was better to hire the local farmers because
    they were more resistant to disease
  • Irish workers were usually used to work
  • it required a lot of manpower
  • none of the above
  • Question 2
  • What was the average life expectancy for a white
    person in 1850?
  • 30-33 years
  • 50-55 years
  • 40-43 years
  • 25-30 years

12
Multiple Choice Quiz
  • Question 3
  • Which contributed to the fact that African
    American children under 5s mortality rate were
    double the white races'?
  • mothers would kill their babies so they didnt
    have to live in slavery
  • the slave life didnt leave enough nutrition for
    a pregnant woman
  • the slave owners would take away the children
  • most African America women had their babies in
    winter, so they got hyperthermia
  • Question 4
  • Why was there such a sharp decrease in the
    average number of children from 1800-1900?
  • the economic strengths of having many kids no
    longer outweighed the cost of having them
  • people were too busy to have kids
  • the food of the time didnt allow for child
    bearing
  • the government restricted how many children a
    family could have

13
Multiple Choice Quiz
  • Question 5
  • Approximately one in _____ pregnancies were
    aborted from 1840-1860.
  • 6
  • 10
  • 3
  • 4
  • Question 6
  • Abortions were mainly used by _______ class
    women.
  • Upper
  • Middle
  • Lower
  • Yeomen

14
Multiple Choice Quiz
  • Question 7
  • The first American pharmacopeia is NOT...
  • a list of medicines
  • mainly herbal remedies
  • a medical dictionary
  • they are all correct
  • Question 8
  • Calomel is also known as __________.
  • Tree bark
  • Water
  • Beer
  • Mercury

15
Multiple Choice Quiz
  • Question 9
  • Medical Licensing was a (n) _________issue in
    America.
  • Easily settled
  • Controversial
  • Not talked about
  • None of the above
  • Question 10
  • Hydropathy...
  • increased attention to clean water
  • was not widespread
  • both of the above
  • none of the above

16
Multiple Choice Answers
  1. A
  2. C
  3. B
  4. A
  5. D
  6. B
  7. C
  8. D
  9. B
  10. A

17
Works Cited
  • Faragher, J, Buhle, M, Czitrom, D. (2003). Out
    of Many A History of the American People. Upper
    Saddle River, NJ Prentice Hall
  • The history of medicine 1800-1850. (2003).
    Retrieved from http//www.mnwelldir.org

18
Chapters 13-15
19
Outline
  • Chapter 13
  • early 1800's city living conditions- no
    municipal water supply, sewers, or garbage
    collection
  • people threw garbage into streets that was then
    eaten by hoards of roaming pigs
  • every American city suffered epidemics of
    sanitation disease like yellow fever, cholera,
    and typhus
  • Philadelphia's yellow fever epidemic of 1793
    killed 4,000 people and stopped all foreign trade
    for than a month
  • Philadelphia completed a city water system in
    1801 in response to the epidemic, but residents
    had to pay a fee only the rich could afford
  • Neither New York or Boston had a public water
    system until the 1840's
  • Garbage collection was a private service
  • Cities charged for costs of sewers, water mains,
    and street paving
  • poorer parts of the city couldn't afford it
  • excessive drinking became a national issue
  • religious reform would attempt to encourage men
    to take a bow not to drink
  • drinking more of a man's problem because it was
    considered rude for women to drink in public
  • they would drink alcohol based medicines like
    Lydia Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which was 19
    alcohol and marketed for "female complaints"
  • more than 7 gallons per capita of hard liquor per
    year in 1830, (double the amount of today)
  • with drinking becoming more socially
    unacceptable, the per capita was less than 2
    gallons in the mid 1840's

20
Outline Contd
  • Chapter 14
  • Farmers would cross the Overland Trails to
    Oregon's Willamette Valley because of promising
    economic opportunity and to get away from the
    malaria prone mid-west after being devastated by
    the Panic of 1837
  • Cholera killed 1,000 people per year in 1849 and
    early 1850's
  • spread by contaminated water
  • causes vomiting and diarrhea
  • led to extreme dehydration to death often in a
    single night
  • Hawaiian men known for their sailing skills would
    join British and American fur ships, but died
    from European diseases

21
Outline Contd
  • 200 Years of American Medicine
  • 1848 the Committee on Medical Literature of the
    AMA (chaired by Oliver Wendell Holmes) identified
    20 American medical journals
  • The committee thought the journals needed to be
    more focused and not put such unworthy articles
    in them
  • 1850 Lemuel Shattuck urged Massachusetts to form
    a state board of health that would encourage and
    promote local efforts
  • The Massachusetts State Board of Health actually
    came to in 1869 and became a role model for other
    states
  • People that were very influential of the time
    period
  • J. Marion Simms
  • (1813-1883)
  • contributions to gynecology
  • was very highly criticized for his inhumane
    surgeries he would perform on African American
    slave women without anesthetic

22
Outline Contd
  • William T. G. Morton
  • (1819-1868)
  • surgical anesthesia
  • Joseph Leidy
  • (1823-1891)
  • contributions to paleontology
  • studies on undercooked meat using microscopes
    encouraged society to thoroughly cook meat, or
    risk getting a parasitic infection
  • Joseph J. Woodward
  • (1833-1884)
  • contributions to microscopy and photomicrography
  • used aniline dyes to color tissues after death
  • attended Abraham Lincoln's autopsy
  • S. Weir Mitchell
  • (1829-1914)
  • work in clinical neurology
  • experimented extensively with animals
  • published 25 works and essays
  • Surgeon General Joseph Lovell started what would
    become the National Library of Medicine
  • 1818

23
Identifying People
  • Joseph Lovell
  • started what would become the National Library of
    Medicine. It first began as a small, personal
    collection of books and today is its own building
    in Washington, DC.
  • J. Marion Sims
  • is called the "father of gynecology" today. There
    is a book titled J. Marion Sims Man or Monster
    Can We Judge a 19th Century Scientist By 21st
    Century Standards? which just proves how
    controversial his experiments and practices were
    and are.

24
Key Terms
  • Temperance- a movement in which a person
    completely gives up alcohol
  • Photomicrography-a photograph that has been taken
    through a microscope
  • Paleontology-the science of the forms of life
    existing in former geologic periods, as
    represented by their fossils.
  • Aniline Dyes-the science of the forms of life
    existing in former geologic periods, as
    represented by their fossils.
  • Massachusetts State Board of Health- established
    in 1869 and became a role model for other states

25
Multiple Choice Quiz
  • Question 1
  • Which of the following is NOT a sanitation
    disease?
  • typhus
  • cholera
  • the flu
  • yellow fever
  • Question 2
  • Cholera killed _____ people in 1849 and the early
    1850's.
  • 1,000
  • 1,500
  • 2,000
  • 500

26
Multiple Choice Quiz
  • Question 3
  • Joseph Lovell had his collection of books that
    would become the National library of Medicine in
    what year?
  • 1847
  • 1818
  • 1765
  • 1899
  • Question 4
  • ___________ men were brought in to work with
    British and Americans because of their great
    sailing skills, but most of them died from
    natural causes.
  • Ethiopian
  • Chinese
  • Korean
  • Hawaiian

27
Multiple Choice Quiz
  • Question 5
  • More than ___ gallons per capita in 1830 of hard
    liquor.
  • 7
  • 3
  • 10
  • 5
  • Question 6
  • Joseph Leidy worked in which of the following
    fields?
  • gynecology
  • neurology
  • pediatrics
  • paleontology

28
Multiple Choice Quiz
  • Question 7
  • Which of the following was a reason the farmers
    would cross the Overland Trails?
  • the California Gold Rush
  • Cholera was a big problem where they were coming
    from
  • both of the above
  • none of the above
  • Question 8
  • Which of the following was NOT a symptom of
    cholera?
  • spread by contaminated water
  • causes vomiting and diarrhea
  • blindness
  • led to extreme dehydration to death often in a
    single night

29
Multiple Choice Quiz
  • Question 9
  • Which of the following was true about 18th
    century living conditions in the city?
  • they had garbage collection
  • they had sewers
  • wild dogs were a serious issue
  • hoards of roaming pigs came and ate leftovers in
    street
  • Question 10
  • In the mid 1840's, which is NOT a reason the per
    capita for hard liquor drop to 2 gallons?
  • drinking became socially unacceptable
  • they found out heavy drinking hurts their livers
  • the temperance movement claimed to bring them
    closer to God
  • They are all true

30
Answers
  1. C
  2. A
  3. B
  4. D
  5. A
  6. D
  7. B
  8. C
  9. D
  10. B

31
Works Cited
  • Faragher, J, Buhle, M, Czitrom, D. (2003). Out
    of Many A History of the American People. Upper
    Saddle River, NJ Prentice Hall
  • U.S Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,
    National Institutes of Health. (1976). 200 years
    of american medicine (76-1069). Retrieved from
    http//www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/pdf/200years.pdf

32
Chapters 16-18
33
Outline
  • Chapter 16
  • Robert Fitzgerald caught Typhoid Fever 5 months
    after enlisting
  • 117 members of his regiment died of disease but
    only 7 in battle
  • later discharged for poor eyesight
  • antiseptics in "infancy" during war
  • men died of minor wounds that got infected
  • gangrene a common cause of death
  • overcrowding and unsanitary conditions bred small
    pox, dysentery, typhoid, pneumonia, and malaria
    in the summer
  • McClellan's Peninsular Campaign
  • among 130,000 men, 1/4 of the unwounded were sick
    in July, 1862
  • because disease is highest in August and
    September, Lincoln recalled McClellan and his
    army
  • 24 hours after battle of Shiloh, many wounded
    still lay on the battlefield in rain
  • some died of exposure, others drowned because
    they couldnt move
  • Confederate prison camp of Andersonville in
    Northern Georgia was made to hold 10,000 men
  • by midsummer, it was holding 33,000 men
  • In the worst weeks of summer, 100 prisoners died
    of disease, malnutrition, or exposure each day

34
Outline (contd)
  • Army Nurses
  • medical supplies armies couldnt provide were
    usually donated by the United States Sanitary
    Commission in the North and by women's volunteer
    groups in the South
  • usually taking care of the sick was women's work,
    but when it came to wounded soldiers, some found
    it "unseemly" for a respectable woman
  • wartime necessity trumped objections from
    doctors, who didnt want women no different than
    their wives or daughters to give them orders, and
    women became army nurses
  • hospital nursing previously considered a job for
    a disreputable woman
  • now considered a suitable job for middle-class
    women
  • under leadership of Dorothea Dix with the
    Sanitary Commission
  • by wars end, 3,000 northern women worked as paid
    nurses, and many more volunteered
  • South had army nurses too, but were not as
    organized
  • during the Seven Days Battles, the women
    established the first "roadside hospitals"
    because there was no more room in hospitals

35
Outline (contd)
  • Dentistry in the Civil War
  • About 500 dentists in the South before the war
  • Jeffery Davis (secretary of war) advocated for
    dentistry corps
  • Confederate army had a dental program
  • Similar idea rejected by Union Army
  • Toothbrushes rare and diet inadequate
  • Recruits turned down if they didnt have 6
    opposing upper and lower front teeth
  • Considered necessary to bite off the end of power
    cartridges used to load rifles
  • Battlefield Surgery
  • Most common surgery was amputation
  • Slow moving Minie bullet used caused catastrophic
    injuries
  • Ex- the 2 minie bullets that hit John Bell Hoods
    leg at Ceickamauya destroyed 5 inches of his
    upper thigh bone, leaving surgeons no choice but
    to amputate
  • The closer to the body the amputation was done,
    the more the increase in the wound being fatal
  • An upper arm amputation had a mortality rate of
    24

36
Outline (contd)
  • In North, out of 11,000 doctors, only 500 had
    performed surgery
  • In South, there were 3,000 doctors and only 27
    had performed surgery
  • People wounded in the head, stomach, or chest
    were usually put aside because they were probably
    going to die
  • Use of antiseptics unknown, doctors wore blood
    and pus spattered clothes
  • If something fell on the floor during surgery,
    theyd rinse it off in cool water and use it as
    if it was clean
  • Operators wouldnt wash hands or wear gloves and
    would often probe wounds with their fingers
  • Chloroform administered if available
  • A good surgeon could amputate a limb in under 10
    minutes
  • George Otis 5 principal advances of the Civil
    War
  • Surgeons learned something about head injuries

37
Outline (contd)
  • How to deal with ghastly wounds
  • Learned how to litigate arteries
  • Information on vertebrates and spines augmented
  • theory and practice of chest wounds forwarded
  • Surgical Fevers
  • Because they were so focused on speed and not
    cleanliness, fevers were common
  • Most common pyemia
  • Mortality rate of 90
  • Form of blood poisoning
  • Means literally pus in blood
  • Also tetanus- mortality rate of 87
  • Erysepilas
  • Hospital gangrene- now extinct

38
Key Terms
  • Break bone Fever- An infectious disease which is
    characterized by severe pains in the eyes, head,
    and extremities and accompanied by catarrhal
    symptoms. Transmitted by the bite of a mosquito.
    AKA dengue
  • Minie bullets-a conical bullet with a hollow base
    that expanded when fired
  • Pyemia-a diseased state in which phylogenic
    bacteria are circulating in the blood,
    characterized by the development of abscesses in
    various organs
  • Erysipelas- a very contagious skin disease due to
    areas being infected with a strep germ. It is
    characterized by redness and swelling of the
    affected areas. It generally lasted between 10
    and 14 days. Most infections of wounds were more
    likely not this disease and actually cellulitis
  • Osteomytelitis- inflammation of bone. A common
    surgical fever

39
Identifying People
  • Clara Barton
  • U.S. philanthropist who organized the American
    Red Cross in 1881
  • Dorothea Dix
  • head of army nurses in the North. Was very
    strict, but not out of harshness. She just didnt
    want to deal with women becoming army nurses just
    to find husbands.

40
Multiple Choice Quiz
  • Question 1
  • An upper arm amputation had a mortality rate of
    ____.
  • 75
  • 24
  • 36
  • 80
  • Question 2
  • The most common surgical fever was ______.
  • Pyemia
  • Tetanus
  • Erysipelas
  • Malaria

41
Multiple Choice Quiz
  • Question 3
  • The US Sanitary Commission did all of the
    following EXCEPT
  • provided help to poor African Americans
  • oversaw army nursing in the North
  • provided medicinal supplies to the North
  • integrated antiseptics into the Southern army
  • Question 4
  • Which of the following was a common anesthesia
    medicine of the Civil War?
  • None
  • Propofol
  • Chloroform
  • Calomel

42
Multiple Choice Quiz
  • Question 5
  • A good surgeon could finish an amputation in
    under ___ minutes.
  • 5
  • 20
  • 60
  • 10
  • Question 6
  • The bullets used in the war were not
  • Minie bullets
  • damage causing
  • easy to remove
  • explosive upon contact

43
Multiple Choice Quiz
  • Question 7
  • The head of the army nurses in the North was
    _________.
  • Clara Barton
  • Dorothea Dix
  • Abraham Lincoln
  • Jeffery Davis
  • Question 8
  • Which of the following is untrue about pyemia?
  • It literally means pus in the blood
  • A blood poisoning
  • Had a mortality rate of 90
  • Was not usually an issue while recovering from
    amputations

44
Multiple Choice Quiz
  • Question 9
  • The _____ to the body the amputation was done,
    the more the increase in the wound being fatal.
  • Closer
  • Father away
  • More parallel
  • None of the above
  • Question 10
  • Which of the following was NOT one of the things
    George Otis said doctors learned from the Civil
    War?
  • How to litigate arteries
  • How to treat ghastly wounds
  • How to treat infections
  • Learned about head injuries

45
Multiple Choice Answers
  1. B
  2. A
  3. D
  4. C
  5. D
  6. C
  7. B
  8. D
  9. A
  10. C

46
Works Cited
  • Faragher, J, Buhle, M, Czitrom, D. (2003). Out
    of Many A History of the American People. Upper
    Saddle River, NJ Prentice Hall
  • Goellnitz, J. (n.d.). Civil war battlefield
    medicine. Retrieved from http//www.ehistory.osu.e
    du
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