Pioneering Medicine: From Sage to Surgery

Author:   John L Smith
Publisher:   Keystone Canyon Press
Volume:   6
ISBN:  

9781953055293


Pages:   78
Publication Date:   10 August 2022
Recommended Age:   From 9 to 12 years
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Pioneering Medicine: From Sage to Surgery


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Overview

Age Range: 9-13 years Grade Level: 4 - 7 Lexile Level: 1210L ISBN: 978-1-953055-29-3 Ebook ISBN: 978-1-953055-30-9 Pages: 80 Series: Fields of Silver and Gold (Book 6) Language: English The Fields of Silver and Gold series brings the past alive. Meet the trailblazers and the pioneers, the first people and the famous explorers, the legends and the everyday heroes that shaped the history, land, and culture of the West. Their powerful stories will fascinate and inspire you. Healers. Scientists. Innovators. Life in the early West was dangerous, full of injuries, accidents, and illnesses. Drs. Eliza Cook, W.H.C. Stephenson, and Charles Daggett stand out as firsts in the field of trained medical doctors, yet countless lives were saved by less well known doctors, shamans, traditional Chinese medicine practitioners, midwives, and nurses.

Full Product Details

Author:   John L Smith
Publisher:   Keystone Canyon Press
Imprint:   Keystone Canyon Press
Volume:   6
Dimensions:   Width: 12.90cm , Height: 0.40cm , Length: 19.80cm
Weight:   0.086kg
ISBN:  

9781953055293


ISBN 10:   195305529
Pages:   78
Publication Date:   10 August 2022
Recommended Age:   From 9 to 12 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Children / Juvenile
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Nevada native, long-time newspaper columnist and author John L. Smith has just published the final volume in his series of thin paperbacks devoted to recounting the exploits and discoveries of some of the most colorful characters who shaped Nevada and the West - especially suited for younger readers wanting a taste of their home state's history.Smith's 69-page Pioneering Medicine: From Sage to Surgery completes his Fields of Silver and Gold series. In this book, he recounts the exploits of Nevada's first medical practitioners, some more skilled than others in the budding medical sciences. In the opening chapter Smith writes about the state's first doctor, Dr. Charles Daggett, and how he saved Mormon Church leader and judge, Orson Hyde, in the 1850s, while Nevada was still a part of the Utah Territory. As was all too common at the time, Hyde had been caught in the Sierra Nevada range during a December snowstorm, reminiscent of the one that tragically trapped the Donner Party a decade earlier. Hyde's legs and feet were seriously frostbitten - likely to take his limbs or his life - when he managed to seek out Dr. Daggett, who knew better than to warm up the limbs too quickly. Smith's research found that Daggett chopped a hole in the ice of a frozen creek and submerged Hyde's legs to more slowly thaw them. The doctor then rubbed the area with turpentine. Hyde's legs were saved without the benefit of the kind of advanced medical treatment that we take for granted today, Smith writes. In Daggett's time, even the best-trained medical doctors relied on treatments that mixed herbs, oils, and even animal parts to make what were little more than home remedies. Western medicine in the 1850s still had much to learn. That is now considered one of the first documented cases of medical treatment in what is now Nevada, according to Smith.The book goes on to delve into medical practices of Nevada's Native American tribes, such as the Paiute, Shoshone, Washoe and others - which included teas, poultices, crystals, medicine bags, chants, dances and sweat lodges. It also recounts how Chinese laborers practiced millennia-old Chinese medicine, which also used herbs extensively. Smith also reports on the groundbreaking efforts of women and minority doctors. There is also a chapter on the ravages of the Spanish Flu in 1918.The book concludes with the relatively recent establishment of medical education at the state universities and the private Touro University Nevada, which are helping to remedy the state's historically under served health care needs.The book gives one a greater appreciation of and understanding of what it took to survive and prosper in those formative years.Thomas Mitchell


Nevada native, long-time newspaper columnist and author John L. Smith has just published the final volume in his series of thin paperbacks devoted to recounting the exploits and discoveries of some of the most colorful characters who shaped Nevada and the West - especially suited for younger readers wanting a taste of their home state's history.Smith's 69-page ""Pioneering Medicine: From Sage to Surgery"" completes his ""Fields of Silver and Gold"" series. In this book, he recounts the exploits of Nevada's first medical practitioners, some more skilled than others in the budding medical sciences. In the opening chapter Smith writes about the state's first doctor, Dr. Charles Daggett, and how he saved Mormon Church leader and judge, Orson Hyde, in the 1850s, while Nevada was still a part of the Utah Territory. As was all too common at the time, Hyde had been caught in the Sierra Nevada range during a December snowstorm, reminiscent of the one that tragically trapped the Donner Party a decade earlier. Hyde's legs and feet were seriously frostbitten - likely to take his limbs or his life - when he managed to seek out Dr. Daggett, who knew better than to warm up the limbs too quickly. Smith's research found that Daggett chopped a hole in the ice of a frozen creek and submerged Hyde's legs to more slowly thaw them. The doctor then rubbed the area with turpentine. ""Hyde's legs were saved without the benefit of the kind of advanced medical treatment that we take for granted today,"" Smith writes. ""In Daggett's time, even the best-trained medical doctors relied on treatments that mixed herbs, oils, and even animal parts to make what were little more than home remedies. Western medicine in the 1850s still had much to learn.""That is now considered one of the first documented cases of medical treatment in what is now Nevada, according to Smith.The book goes on to delve into medical practices of Nevada's Native American tribes, such as the Paiute, Shoshone, Washoe and others - which included teas, poultices, crystals, medicine bags, chants, dances and sweat lodges. It also recounts how Chinese laborers practiced millennia-old Chinese medicine, which also used herbs extensively. Smith also reports on the groundbreaking efforts of women and minority doctors. There is also a chapter on the ravages of the Spanish Flu in 1918.The book concludes with the relatively recent establishment of medical education at the state universities and the private Touro University Nevada, which are helping to remedy the state's historically under served health care needs.The book gives one a greater appreciation of and understanding of what it took to survive and prosper in those formative years.Thomas Mitchell


Author Information

Native Nevadan John L. Smith is a longtime journalist and the author of more than a dozen books. He has won many state, regional, and national awards for his writing and was inducted into the Nevada Press Association Hall of Fame in 2016, the same year that saw him honored with the James Foley/Medill Medal for Courage in Journalism, the Society of Professional Journalists Ethics Award, and the Ancil Payne Award from the University of Oregon. He freelances for a variety of publications, including The Nevada Independent. The father of a grown daughter, Amelia, he is married to the writer Sally Denton and makes his home in Boulder City, Nevada.

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