Thomas RosenthalDoctor Relations, or Taming BickeringFrom his 1804 arrival in the frontier village of New Amsterdam (today’s Buffalo, NY), apprentice trained thirty-five-year-old Dr. Cyrenius…Jul 22Jul 22
Thomas RosenthalMagical Thinking and the Knowledge Gaps We FillThe miasmic theory held that rotting organic material generated smelly bad air that carried disease from swamps and ghetto slums to humans…May 5May 5
Thomas RosenthalDipsomania: A Manic Thirst for BoozeNineteenth-century village physicians observed their patients on house calls, on village streets, and occasionally in their offices. They…Dec 1, 2023Dec 1, 2023
Thomas RosenthalMan versus Men and Woman versus WomenThe men had it. At least that is what Thomas Carlyle said in his 1829 essay, Signs of the Times. Carlyle proposed men were guided by…Aug 8, 2023Aug 8, 2023
Thomas RosenthalHow Victorian Doctors Learned MidwiferyThroughout history, wise women sought assistance from more experienced women during labor, delivery, and the immediate postpartum period…May 6, 2023May 6, 2023
Thomas RosenthalA Widow’s Melancholia, 1834Caring is a window to the human soul, theirs and ours.Oct 28, 2022Oct 28, 2022
Thomas RosenthalDid Village Doctors or Jenner Discover the First Vaccine?In Leviticus, the Bible describes garments spreading disease. The mummy of Egyptian pharaoh Ramses V (died: 1156 BC) bears the scars of…Aug 23, 2022Aug 23, 2022
Thomas RosenthalBloodletting Cures, or Does It?Prior to the twentieth century and going back to the ancient Egyptians, bloodletting was so common that the lancet and the barber’s pole…Jul 7, 2022Jul 7, 2022
Thomas RosenthalNew York Doctor, Wife Perish: CholeraIn 1832, when municipalities relied on free ranging pigs to clean the streets of garbage, horse manure, and morning-pot dumps, Asiatic…Feb 25, 2022Feb 25, 2022