Professional dominance? Encounters between physicians and patients in the first half of the 19th century under the Habsburg Monarchy
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Hanulík, VladanEditorial
Universidad de Granada
Materia
Physicians Patients 19th century Clinical education Habsburg monarchy Marienbad
Date
2021Referencia bibliográfica
Hanulík, Vladan. «Professional dominance?». Dynamis: Acta Hispanica ad Medicinae Scientiarumque Historiam Illustrandam, 2021, Vol. 41, Núm. 2, p. 323-355, https://raco.cat/index.php/Dynamis/article/view/401948.
Sponsorship
GAČR - Czech Science Foundation nr. 20-17978YAbstract
In Vienna, the tradition of clinical teaching began with Anton de Haen’s introduction
of the newly established educational approach in the Buergerspital in 1754. In the
second half of the 18th century, clinical teaching at medical faculties contributed to the shift
of power relationships between doctors and patients. The medical gaze that the doctor and the
patient directed towards each other regulated the patients’ as well as the physicians’ behavior
in the setting of hospital medicine, but this does not mean that a wholesale transformation of
the medical field took place. Patients were not mere passive objects of externally controlled
processes but influential agents of medical process. Middle- and upper-class patients sought
assistance from their family general practitioners even at the beginning of the 20th century,
and the relationships between these family doctors and their patients were more equal. Up to
the end of the 19th century, physician-patient contact often comprised traditional methods
of consultation by letter, and physicians saw and treated their patients predominantly in the
patient’s homes. A doctor’s medical authority was not solely based on his knowledge, skills,
and reputation among colleagues at the medical faculty. As in the early modern tradition
of doctor-patient encounters, patients continued to play the role of ultimate arbiter of the
performativity of physicians.