Jennifer J. Connor - Faculty of Medicine, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.
Can Bull Med Hist. 2021;38(2):340-371. doi: 10.3138/cbmh.513-022021. Epub 2021 Aug 17.
This article provides context for three studies about early 20-century medical cases in the geographically distributed humanitarian aid organization founded by Wilfred Grenfell in pre-Confederation Newfoundland and Labrador. It situates these studies within historiographical and theoretical approaches to case histories and their publication by medical practitioners, the background for research on the clinical records of the Grenfell organization's main hospital, and the history behind specific case information for coastal patients. While the cases examined cohere through their organizational origin, the authors of these three studies reveal sometimes unexpected representations of the patient in text and illustration. In these ways, both this introductory article and the following three studies emphasize the enduring appeal of narrative approaches to case writing while also pointing to the evolving ethics of publishing medical reports for general readers and scholars. Together they invite renewed attention to the representation of medical cases in publications that increasingly are available globally in internet collections.
本文为三篇研究论文提供了背景信息,这些论文研究了 20 世纪早期位于新不伦瑞克省和拉布拉多地区的一个地理上分散的人道主义援助组织中的医学案例。本文将这些论文置于医学从业者撰写和发表病例历史的史学和理论方法的背景下,同时也介绍了格伦费尔组织主要医院临床记录研究的背景,以及沿海地区患者具体病例信息背后的历史。虽然这些案例因其组织起源而具有一致性,但这三篇研究论文的作者在文字和插图中有时会对患者进行意想不到的描述。通过这些方式,本文和接下来的三篇研究都强调了叙事方法在病例写作中的持久吸引力,同时也指出了为普通读者和学者出版医学报告的伦理规范不断演变。它们共同呼吁人们重新关注在互联网资源库中越来越全球化出版的医学案例的呈现方式。