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Gynecology and the Third Republic |
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American doctors were however, repelled by the general disdain with which French physicians
treated their patients, particularly women. “Some aspects of Parisian medicine were deemed
translatable into an American context, such as anatomical knowledge and statistical methodology,
while others, such as the apparent "therapeutic nihilism" and indifferent bedside manner of
French physicians, were not simply idiosyncratic, but downright undemocratic.”
This site’s expert on all things medical, Dr. Caroline de Costa, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at James Cook University School of Medicine, noted that the French interest in women’s health and speculum examination (the speculum is an instrument used to open the vulva and explore the internal workings) began with Dr. Joseph Recamier in the early 19th Century. The vaginal speculum was widely used in ancient times. Assorted vaginal speculums were discovered among the ruins of Pompeii but fell into disuse in Europe by medieval times. The bimanual, a vaginal examination with the woman positioned on her back facing the physician or midwife, the modern technique that Pozzi perfected and taught, grew from there. |
A Speculum from Ancient Rome |
a 19th century speculum | According to mid-wife Shira Happlin the speculum “was rediscovered and popularized by Joseph Recamier. He constructed a slender tin tube through which he could examine and inspect the uterine neck and the vagina. Because of the sight the speculum gave to gynecologists, it became a very controversial technology. In the mid to late nineteenth century, there was heated debate about the use of the speculum. Examinations by speculum involved exposure and penetration of what was "private". Most doctors outside of France felt that to look at and to touch female genitalia was unnecessary (for it) sacrificed female delicacy and ignored medical ethics.” Dr. de Costa has noted that though the French were pioneers in the field of gynecology and gynecological examination but were opposed by many British practitioners thought French methods and techniques of examination immoral. |

Dr. James Marion Sims | From the mid 19th century, when examining a woman, many physicians around the world utilized the technique perfected by Dr. James Marion Sims. The debate over his method stems from the fact that he performed his first gynecologic surgery on enslaved African women who were often forced to give birth alone in the cotton fields and developed obstetrics fistulas in the process. Any modern women would shudder at the crude methods Sims used on these early patients. In, order to examine the fistula more thoroughly, Sims had his patient squat on her knees and elbows, the woman positioned on all fours as he probed the vagina with a rudimentary speculum created by bending a pewter spoon into a shape that could be inserted into the vagina. Sims relied on inspection of the female genital tract; Pozzi also used the speculum, both Sims model and the bivalve models of which Recamier’s was the first modern example, but Pozzi also used and perfected the bimanual pelvic examination and went on to popularize it. |
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“From being interns women might then progress to becoming heads of clinics, then chiefs of services and judges of courses…and why not women candidates for the Ecole Normale, the Polytechnique (both highly regarded tertiary institutions) even St. Cyr (the most prestigious military academy of the period). Have you thought about their inevitable pregnancies? Are these modern Amazons going to be chaste like those of antiquity? Taking the argument to its logical conclusion, why should the woman who becomes an intern not even become a woman deputy? No to women as interns.”Since there was no reliable contraception during this period, it is possible that Madame Bres became pregnant during the course of her studies and had to abandon them during her confinement.

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Pozzi continued to take educational sojourns to England, Germany, Austria, Latin America
and the United States to share new technical approaches with physicians throughout the world.
According to Dr. de Costa who studied many of Pozzi’s publications at the Welcome Library in
London, “Pozzi dealt meticulously with anesthesia, antisepsis, indications for surgery, methods
of surgery, post-op care and all kinds of pathology. There is no doubt that he was a magnificent
and innovative surgeon. He was made an honorary Fellow of the American Gynecological Association.
(This was mentioned in the forward of the English translation of the 2nd volume his Treatise on Gynecology.)
In 1904, he became one of the subjects of a series of celebrity biographies that was sold throughout Paris in the Felix Potin stores. The French Medical Society lauded Pozzi with a beautiful bronze medallion crafted by Jules Clement Chaplain and he joined the august body of France’s most honored citizens as a member of the Legion of Honor. |
The Legion of Honor |
Caicature of Sam with a fencing epée attached with an “O” for ovary at the tip | In 1909 he represented France in New York at a meeting to mark “One Hundred Years of Ovariotomy.” That year, the elegant doctor was caricatured surrounded by women as he brandished a fencing epée attached with an “O” for ovary at the tip. Ovariotomy was an operation to remove large ovarian cysts together with any tissue remaining of the original ovary. Prior to the advent of modern surgery and anesthesia such cysts often grew very large and could occupy the whole abdomen and contain many liters of fluid. In 1809 a country Kentucky doctor, the father of ovariotomy, Ephraim MacDowell, had operated, without anesthesia or antisepsis, on the cyst of a woman named Jane Crawford – the cyst had contained 15 liters of fluid, and Jane, operated upon while sitting in an armchair and held down by two men, survived the experience. By 1909 ovariotomy had become a safe procedure done under general anesthesia and in the sterile surroundings of an operating theatre, the success rate was high and mortality rates low. At the New York meeting, Pozzi, one of the most capable ovariotomists in France, said to great applause and a standing ovation that “ovariotomy is no longer an American operation but an operation belonging to all the civilized nations of the world!” |
| While the antiseptic practices of French hospitals in the 1890s are horrific to the modern physician, (horsehair sutures, sprays of carbolic acid and silver nitrate) at the time they were state of the art, especially the information on general anesthesia, antiseptics and training of the surgical teams. In an interesting side note, Pozzi’s assistant at Lourcine-Pascal was Robert Proust, the younger brother of famed writer Marcel Proust. The younger Proust eventually joined Pozzi as a partner in his surgical practice in 1904 and became as brilliant a physician as his brother was a writer. |
Robert Proust |
Special thanks to the Wellcome Trust for providing this engraving of Sam Pozzi
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