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《现代美国的义肢、医学与残障:A. A. 马克斯义肢公司案例》

Prosthetics, Medicine, and Disability in Modern America: The Case of the A. A. Marks Artificial Limb Company.

机构信息

Research Professor, Institute of World and Global History, Ewha Womans University.

出版信息

Uisahak. 2023 Apr;32(1):33-80. doi: 10.13081/kjmh.2023.32.33.

Abstract

Through the case of the A. A. Marks Artificial Limb Company, this article explores how the technology and business of prosthetics grew in America up to the First World War. In 1853, Amasa A. Marks established the artificial limb company A. A. Marks in New York. By the time of the First World War, the company had become the largest supplier of artificial limbs in the United States and had gained international recognition, exporting its products all over the world. Focusing on the company's growth before the war, this paper analyzes how American artificial limb makers positioned themselves between art and medicine and between surgeons and disabled customers at a time when their occupation had yet to be established as a specialized profession. From the mid-nineteenth century when the artificial limb business burgeoned to the First World War, American society went through various social and cultural changes that influenced the prosthetics industry and the perception of disability. During the Civil War, numerous soldiers were injured but survived because advancements in amputation techniques enabled surgeons to save more lives despite limb loss. The growing number of maimed veterans required more mechanical and public support for their rehabilitation. As a reconstruction project of the nation and a way to address the sense of damaged masculinity felt by injured war veterans, both Union and Confederate states approved support for providing them with artificial limbs at public expense. In postbellum America, as well as deformity and amputation, industrialization created a need for artificial limbs as the brutality of advanced weapons and unfortunate accidents involving machines and railroads increased the number of amputees. Thus during the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century, recognition of maimed bodies in public places went through a legislative and cultural transformation. The growth of artificial limb manufacturer A. A. Marks was in tune with such technological, medical, and sociocultural changes. Along with technological innovations and patents to protect these innovations, Amasa Marks devised various marketing methods and strategies through which the company secured customers and finally expanded the prosthetics market. As its customers increased, the company accumulated quantitative and qualitative data from patients' responses and interviews, and its own observations. In the late nineteenth century, George E. Marks, Amasa Marks's son and a representative of the company, analyzed customers' experiences of disability, gathering information on patterns of disability and mortality rates. Based on the company's rich experience with a large number of patient cases, George Marks advanced criticisms of surgical methods and provided second opinions on amputation surgeries. In doing so, he attempted to promote the limb maker's position from mere artisan to specialist, redefining the relationship between medicine and prosthetics and between surgeon and prosthetist. He also conveyed patients' complaints and needs to the medical men in the process, and distributed the company's findings and knowledge to surgeons and the general public by publishing treatises, articles, and manuals. Consequently, the company influenced an important epistemological turn in which the prosthetic perspective was considered prior to amputation surgery, not just as an inevitable follow-up.

摘要

本文以 A. A. 马克斯人工肢体公司的案例为切入点,探讨了美国在一战前假肢技术和行业的发展。1853 年,阿马萨·A·马克斯(Amasa A. Marks)在纽约创立了人工肢体公司 A. A. 马克斯(A. A. Marks)。到一战时,该公司已成为美国最大的假肢供应商,并在国际上获得认可,产品出口到世界各地。本文聚焦于公司战前的发展,分析了美国假肢制造商如何在其职业尚未成为专业化职业的时期,在艺术与医学、外科医生与残疾客户之间定位自己。从假肢业务蓬勃发展的 19 世纪中叶到一战时期,美国社会经历了各种社会文化变革,这些变革影响了假肢行业和残疾观念。在内战期间,由于截肢技术的进步,外科医生能够在失去肢体的情况下挽救更多生命,因此大量士兵受伤但幸存下来。越来越多的伤残退伍军人需要更多的机械和公共支持来康复。作为国家的重建项目和解决受伤退伍军人感受到的受损男子气概的一种方式,联邦和邦联各州都批准用公共资金为他们提供假肢。在美国战后时期,除了畸形和截肢,工业化也需要假肢,因为先进武器的残酷性以及机器和铁路事故的不幸增加了截肢者的数量。因此,在 19 世纪末和 20 世纪初,公共场所伤残身体的认知经历了立法和文化的转变。人工肢体制造商 A. A. 马克斯的发展与这些技术、医疗和社会文化变革同步。除了技术创新和专利来保护这些创新外,阿马萨·马克斯(Amasa Marks)还通过各种营销方法和策略来确保客户,并最终扩大了假肢市场。随着客户的增加,公司从患者的反应和访谈中积累了定量和定性数据,以及自己的观察。19 世纪后期,阿马萨·马克斯(Amasa Marks)的儿子乔治·E·马克斯(George E. Marks)代表公司分析了客户的残疾体验,收集了残疾模式和死亡率的信息。基于公司在大量患者病例方面的丰富经验,乔治·马克斯(George Marks)对手术方法提出了批评,并对截肢手术提供了第二意见。通过这样做,他试图将肢体制造商的地位从单纯的工匠提升为专家,重新定义了医学和假肢之间以及外科医生和假肢技师之间的关系。他还在这个过程中向医学界人士转达了患者的抱怨和需求,并通过出版论文、文章和手册向外科医生和公众传播公司的发现和知识。因此,该公司推动了一个重要的认识论转变,即假肢视角在截肢手术之前就被考虑到了,而不仅仅是作为不可避免的后续。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/d2e9/10521865/03af24321673/kjmh-32-1-33f1.jpg

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