Edward Jarvis and the Medical World of Nineteenth-Century America
Book Details
Author(s)Gerald N Grob
PublisherUniversity of Tennessee Press
ISBN / ASIN087049239X
ISBN-139780870492396
Sales Rank4,241,370
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
During the nineteenth century the theory
and practice of medicine changed dramatically,
but today relatively little is known about the
careers of those responsible for reshaping the
profession. This biographical study of Edward
Jarvis (1803-1884), a leading physician,
psychiatrist, and statistician, helps fill that gap.
Focusing on the nature of American medicine
in the last century, the book traces the
development of social crises coincident with
the growth of Jarvis's career and describes
his responses to needs that he perceived in
American medicine, mental care, and society
in general.
Jarvis's practice and philosophy of holistic
preventive medicine typified an approach
that altered the basic character of American
medical theory. Reared in a devout household,
instructed in Unitarian theology, trained in
Common Sense philosophy, committed to a
Baconian interpretation of science, and
influenced by the rising doubt about the
efficacy of traditional therapeutics, Jarvis
contributed to a newer synthesis that merged
medicine, morality, and social activism. He
maintained-even when the specific germ
theory began to transform the medical
profession-that disease could not be
understood apart from individual behavior
or the state of society.
