Dr James Marion Sims – kontrowersyjny „ojciec ginekologii”

Nowa Medycyna ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Ciesielska

Vesico-vaginal fistula (VVF) was a a catastrophic and common complication of childbirth among American women. In the mid 1800s Dr. J. Marion Sims reported the successful repair of vesicovaginal fistulas with a technique he developed by performing multiple operations on on a group of young, enslaved, African American women who had this condition between 1846 and 1849. Numerous modern authors have attacked Sims’s medical ethics, arguing that he manipulated the institution of slavery to perform ethically unacceptable human experiments on powerless, unconsenting women. It is impossible to understand Sims’s operations within the clinical context of the 1840s. To avoid the problems of “presentism”, in which beliefs, attitudes, and practices of the 21st century are anachronistically projected backward into the early 19th century we have to judge Sims within the context of his time. This is the only way to understand that Sims’ first fistula operations were legal, that they were carried out with express therapeutic intent for the purpose of repairing these women’s injuries, that they conformed to the ethical requirements of his time, and that they were performed with the patients’ knowledge, cooperation, assent, and assistance. Though the legacy of Dr. Sims is for some authors controversial he still seems to be considered as “the father of gyncology” who developed the first consistently successful surgical technique for the vesico-vaginal fistula.

2005 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 0-0
Author(s):  
Stasė Mičelytė ◽  
Bronius Domža ◽  
Darius Šilinis ◽  
Egidijus Gatelis

Stasė Mičelytė1, Bronius Domža2, Darius Šilinis1, Egidijus Gatelis11 Vilniaus miesto universitetinės ligoninėsUrologijos skyrius,Antakalnio g. 57, LT-10204 VilniusEl paštas: [email protected] Vilniaus universitetoAkušerijos-ginekologijos klinika,Antakalnio g. 57, LT-10207 Vilnius Įvadas / tikslas Pūslinė makšties fistulė (PMF) – dažniausiai antrinė ir jatrogeninė komplikacija. Remdamiesi ligos istorijomis ir asmenine patirtimi, retrospektyviai išanalizavome per 35 metus gydytas pūslines makšties fistules. Kartu pateikiame trumpą istorinės bei šiuolaikinės literatūros apžvalgą. Ligoniai ir metodai Į Vilniaus miesto universitetinę ligoninę 1969–2004 m. pateko 51 moteris, kuriai susidarė pūslinė makšties fistulė. Iš jų 46 (90% moterims) fistulė atsivėrė po histerektomijos 1–14 pooperacinę dieną. Visos ligonės skundėsi daliniu ar visišku šlapimo nelaikymu. Šlapimo pūslė drenuota Foley kateteriu. Atlikti įprasti urologiniai, ginekologiniai ir klinikiniai tyrimai. Skirti antibiotikai. Fistulės kraštų elektrokoaguliaciją atlikome 13, o atvirąsias transvaginalines, transvezikines ir transabdominalines operacijas (65 kartus) – 47 ligonėms, iš jų devynioms – 18 pakartotinių antrinių. Rezultatai Nė viena fistulė neužgijo savaime; 4 (iš 13) užgijo po transvezikinės elektrokoaguliacijos ir 45 (iš 47) – po atvirųjų operacijų. Pasveiko (išgijo) 96% ligonių. Dviejų (4%) ligonių gydymas buvo neveiksmingas. Išvados Makšties pūslinė fistulė – retai pasitaikanti komplikacija; per 35 metus gydėme tik 51 tokią ligonę, iš jų 34 buvo atsiųstos iš kitų ligoninių. Histerektomija – dažniausia (90%) šios fistulės priežastis. Dalį mažų fistulių užgydo endovezikinė jų kraštų elektrokoaguliacija. Dažniausiai pasirinktinas vaginalinis operacinis fistulės užgydymo būdas, dalyvaujant urologui ir ginekologui. Reikšminiai žodžiai: pūslinė makšties fistulė, priežastys ir mechanizmas, diagnostika, gydymas, priežiūros ypatumai Vesicovaginal fistulas: 35 years of clinical experience Stasė Mičelytė1, Bronius Domža2, Darius Šilinis1, Egidijus Gatelis11 Vilnius University Hospital, Department of Urology,Antakalnio strg. 57, LT-10204 Vilnius, LithuaniaE-mail: [email protected] Vilnius University Hospital,Clinic of Obstetric and Gynaecology,Antakalnio str. 57, LT-10207 Vilnius, Lithuania Background / objective Vesico-vaginal fistula (VVF) is mostly a secondary and often yatrogenic postoperative complication. Based on case histories and mostly on our experience, we have made a retrospective analysis with a brief summary of historical and modern literature. Patients and methods There were 51 patients with VVF admitted to Vilnius Cty University Hospital Urological Department in 1969–2004. In 46 (90%) VVF opened after hysterectomy on 1–14 postoperative day. All (51) suffered from partial or complete urine leakage. Urinary blader was drained with a Foley catheter. Routine urological, gynaecological and common clinical analyses were made. Antibiotics were prescribed. Electrocoagulation of small and fresh fistula edges was performed in 13 cases, open transvaginal and transabdominal operations were made for 47 patients (65 times), in 9 of them 18 were repeated operations. Results No one of the VVF closed after conservative treatment. Four from 13 closed after transvesical electrocoagulation and 45 from 47 after open operations. Totally VVF closed in 96% of patients. In 2 cases the treatment was unsuccessful. Conclusions VVF is a rare complication: during 35 years we treated only 51 patients, in 17 of them VVF opened after procedures in our hospital and 34 elsewhere. In 90% the reason for VVF was hysterectomy. Part of small fistulas can be closed by endovesical electrocoagulation of fistula edges. In most cases vaginal approach for closuring VVF must be chosen with both the urologist and gynaecologist participating in the operation. Keywords: vesico-vaginal fistula, VVF, etiology, diagnostics, treatment, care


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 706
Author(s):  
M. Ginzburg

A black woman suffering from a fistula of 4 millimeters in diameter, located on the anterior wall of the vagina, was twice unsuccessfully operated on by Dr. Corson. Then S., starting the 3rd section of the operation, came up with such an adaptation: taking a small, guta-percha ball (children's toy), cut it into the center and. I inserted an oblong shoe button through the hole with the eye outward; a strong thread is pulled through the eyelet. The ball in a compressed form is passed through the fistula into the bladder. When the ball is pulled downwards, the edges of the fistula, protruding, become clearly visible and easily accessible. Having freed the edges of the fistula and applied sutures, Corson parted the stitches, removed the ball from the urinary bladder and then finished the operation in the usual way. The fistula healed with primary tension.


2021 ◽  
pp. 039156032110047
Author(s):  
Sunirmal Choudhury ◽  
Avisek Dutta ◽  
Naveen Gupta ◽  
Dilip Kumar Pal

Aim: In this study our idea is to compare the effectiveness of using interposing layer of fibrin glue to omental flap in reducing the failure of laparoscopic vesicovaginal fistula repair. Methods: Forty patients with fairly large vesicovaginal fistula were enrolled and divided in two groups of 20 each. We have used fibrin glue in one group and omental flap in the other group. Result: Of 20 patients in fibrin glue group no failure was seen, while 5 patients out of 20 in omental flap group had failure. Conclusion: This result is statistically significant and hence use of fibrin glue to be considered during laparoscopic repair of vesicovaginal fistulas.


Author(s):  
Teresa Zackodnik

What in contemporary parlance we would call African American feminisms has been a politics and activism communal in its orientation, addressing the rights and material conditions of women, men, and children since the first Dutch slaver brought captive Africans to Jamestown, Virginia in 1619. Although Black women would not have used the terms “feminist” or “feminism,” which did not enter into use until what is recognized now as the first wave of feminism, scholars have been using those terms for the past two decades to refer to Black women’s activism in the United States stretching at least as far back as the 1830s with the oratory and publications of Maria Stewart and the work of African American women in abolition and church reform. Alongside and in many ways enabled by crucial forms of resistance to slavery, Black women developed forms of feminist activism and a political culture that advanced claims for freedom and rights in a number of arenas. Yet our historical knowledge of 19th-century Black feminist activism has been limited by historiographical tendencies. Histories of American feminism have tended to marginalize Black feminisms by positioning these activists as contributing to a white-dominant narrative, focused on woman’s rights and suffrage. The literature on African American feminism has tended to hail the Black women’s club movement of the late 19th century as the emergence of that politics. Though many people may recognize only a handful of 19th-century African American feminists by name and reputation, early Black feminism was multiply located and extensive in its work. African American women continued the voluntary work that benevolent and mutual aid societies had begun in the late 18th century and established literary societies during the early 19th century; they entered Black nationalist debates over emigration and advocated for the self-sufficiency and education of their communities, including women; and they fought to end slavery and the repressive racialized violence that accompanied it in free states and continued through the nadir. Throughout the century, African American feminists negotiated competing and often conflicting demands within interracial reform movements like abolition, woman’s rights, and temperance, and worked to open the pulpit, platform, press, and politics to Black women’s voices.


Sexual Health ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 288 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy Nunn ◽  
Samuel Dickman ◽  
Alexandra Cornwall ◽  
Helena Kwakwa ◽  
Kenneth H. Mayer ◽  
...  

Background African American women are disproportionately affected by HIV/AIDS. Concurrent sexual partnerships may contribute to racial disparities in HIV infection. Little is known about attitudes and practices related to concurrency among African American women, or the social, structural and behavioural factors influencing concurrency. Methods: We recruited 19 heterosexual African American women engaging in concurrent sexual partnerships from a public clinic in Philadelphia in 2009. We conducted interviews exploring social norms, attitudes and practices about concurrency, and the structural, social and behavioural factors influencing concurrent sexual partnerships, guided by grounded theory. Results: Seventeen women reported one main and one or more non-main partners; two reported no main partners. Many women used condoms more frequently with non-main than main partners, noting they trust main partners more than non-main partners. Social factors included social normalisation of concurrency, inability to negotiate partners’ concurrent partnerships, being unmarried, and not trusting partners. Lack of trust was the most commonly cited reason that women engaged in concurrent partnerships. Structural factors included economic dependence on partners, partners’ dependence on women for economic support and incarceration that interrupted partnerships. Behavioural factors included alcohol and cocaine use. Conclusions: Social, structural and behavioural factors strongly influenced these African American women’s concurrent sexual partnerships. Many HIV interventions disseminated by the CDC focus largely on behavioural factors and may fail to address the social and structural factors influencing African American women’s sexual networks. Novel HIV prevention interventions that address the social determinants of African American women’s HIV risks are urgently needed.


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