Galdston M
New York University School of Medicine, USA.
J Urban Health. 1999 Dec;76(4):509-32. doi: 10.1007/BF02351507.
In 1938, as a New York University/Bellevue Hospital intern, I recorded notes on the 384 cases I saw during my 1-month ambulance duty. Although I intended to use them to follow up the clinical course of patients I admitted to Bellevue, the long hours and pressure of work made this ambitious goal unachievable. Sixty years later, after retirement from academic medicine and medical practice at New York University School of Medicine, I found the long-lost notes among my papers. They are of historic interest since they provide insight into aspects of primary and emergency medicine of the era when the therapeutic efficacy of the sulfanilamide class of agents was under investigation, a unique view of the life of an intern just before interns were replaced on ambulances by technicians, and a glimpse of the surprising character of several neighborhoods of pre-World War II Manhattan. The notes also provide the basis for a current analysis of case incidence and treatment by disease category. A description of the confluence of social, economic, and political forces that led to the establishment of the Bellevue Hospital Ambulance Service, the first such urban service in the world, is included.
1938年,作为纽约大学/贝莱维医院的一名实习生,我记录了自己在为期1个月的救护车值班期间接诊的384个病例。尽管我本打算用这些记录跟踪我收治到贝莱维医院的患者的临床病程,但长时间的工作和工作压力使这个宏伟目标无法实现。60年后,在从纽约大学医学院的学术医学和医疗实践岗位退休后,我在自己的文件中找到了这些遗失已久的记录。它们具有历史意义,因为它们让我们得以洞察磺胺类药物治疗效果正处于研究阶段时那个时代的初级和急救医学的各个方面,提供了在救护车实习生被技术人员取代之前对实习生生活的独特视角,还让我们得以瞥见二战前曼哈顿几个街区令人惊讶的面貌。这些记录也为当前按疾病类别分析病例发生率和治疗情况提供了依据。文中还描述了促成世界上首个此类城市服务机构——贝莱维医院救护车服务成立的社会、经济和政治力量的交汇情况。