Luis Razetti | |
---|---|
Born | September 10, 1862 |
Died | May 14, 1932 (69) |
Citizenship | Venezuela Venezuelan |
Known for | Being one of the most important figures in Venezuelan medical history, advancing medicine in the country. |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Medicine |
Luis Razetti (Caracas, Venezuela, September 10, 1862 - May 14, 1932) was a surgeon, who supported and managed a number of advances in the progress of Venezuelan medicine. He gained his Doctorate in Medicine from the Central University of Venezuela, is considered the driving-force in the "Renaissance of the Venezuelan medicine", concerning education, research centers and medical practices in Venezuela. One of the two schools of Medicine of the Central University of Venezuela bears his name. [1] [2] [3] Together with Dr. José María Vargas and Dr. José Gregorio Hernández (who is also best remembered for his great religious vocation), Dr. Luis Razetti stands out among the most valuable figures in Venezuelan medicine. His remains rest in the National Pantheon of Venezuela in Caracas since June 23, 1982.
Luis Razetti was born in Caracas, Venezuela, on September 10, 1862. He was baptized in the cathedral church with the name of Luis María Francisco Nicolás de Jesús. He was the son of Don Luigi Razetti, a merchant of Genoa, Italy and Doña Emeteria Martinez Sanz, who was the granddaughter of Lic. Miguel José Sanz, tutor of the Liberator Simón Bolívar. Besides Luis, who was the eldest son, Razetti and Martinez Sanz had two sons, Enrique and Ricardo. Luis' brothers were engineers, however Enrique died very young in 1892 and Ricardo lived until 1932. At a young age, the father in their family travelled to Italy and never returned to Venezuela, meaning Doña Emeteria was responsible for the care and education of their children. It is said that once, Luis Razetti wrote All I am I owe to her.
He attended the Escuela Niño Jesús for primary school, then completed his baccalaureate at the Central University of Venezuela, where he obtained the degree of Bachelor of Philosophy (July 13, 1878). At the same university, he immediately began his studies in medicine, obtaining the title of Doctor in Medicine and Surgery (August 4, 1884), a month before turning 22 years old. A few days later, he traveled to the countryside, where he spent his first years as a professional, particularly in the states Lara, Zulia and the Andes, back to Caracas after 5 years (1884-1889).
In 1890 he moved to Paris where he completed his postgraduate studies (1890-1893), specializing in surgery and Obstetrics. The influence of the French school, dominant then, made a deep and lasting impression on his mind, although he continued to draw on other sources, as is evident in his admiration for Santiago Ramón y Cajal, Charles Darwin, and Ernst Haeckel. He returned to Caracas in December 1892 to continue their professional practice, which served in his hometown, Caracas, until his death. In 1897 married Miss Luisa Amelia Díaz Guardia; however, Luis Razetti had no children.
Luis Razetti instrumental to progress in the field of Venezuelan medicine of his day, make important contributions, systematic and organized, so many of his followers and disciples of that time as well as contemporary physicians, attributed to be the driving force renaissance of the Venezuelan medicine. Luis Razetti was characterized as a multifaceted professional. Among his most notable contributions may mention, in chronological order as follows:
As a surgeon, he shares with Dr. Pablo Acosta Ortiz the glory of being one of the founders of modern surgery in Venezuela. The hospital Vargas was the scene par excellence of surgical performance, supported by the head teacher of the Clinical Surgery chair. In his extensive operating statistics, several surgical procedures stand out as being performed for the first time in the country. Razetti also introduced a multitude of techniques and the use of surgical instruments. Among his surgical literature stands his book, Lecciones y notas de cirugía clínica (1917), and his work about appendicitis, typhus intestinal perforations, eclampsia and the Cesarean operation. In 1911, he was the founder of the first private clinic established in Caracas for the caring for the sick and performing high surgery. Her brother, Ricardo Razetti was the design engineer and builder of the clinic, which is known to this day as "Policlina Luis Razetti".
As a teacher, he devoted himself to teaching for more than half his life; imparting over sixteen years of teaching, he was the chair of the Anatomy Department and from 1914 until his death, Professor of Clinical Surgery. He also lectured in External Pathology and Operative Medicine and Obstetrics. In his grand scope of educational work and the outstanding number of disciples who were trained, he founded his own school in the Faculty of Medicine of the Universidad Central de Venezuela. In 1908, he served as rector of the Central University of Venezuela (he was vice rector in 1901) and in 1909, served as Senator by the state of Zulia. As medicine is a social function, he was an autodidactic hygienist in a time when the Ministry of Health and Welfare did not exist, conducting campaigns against alcoholism, tuberculosis, prostitution, Sexually transmitted diseases, infant mortality and cancer. [4]
After General Juan Vicente Gómez's beloved son, Ali Gomez, died as one of the first victims of the Spanish flu pandemic, in 1918 Dr. Razetti created and presided over the Socorro Board of the Federal District. This board conducted a census of places where the epidemic was older, and he realized that poverty and lack of hygiene, in addition to malnutrition, contributed to the spread of the disease. They established hospitals in family homes, public places, on the corner of Castan, or on the corner of Maturin, which served as the Masonic lodge. Public gatherings and parties were banned, including that children stopped going to school and no masses were officiated in the churches. The bodies were counted by the hundreds, and the Southern General Cemetery was ordered to build numerous individual graves and a large common grave for the victims of the epidemic. Today that place is called "La Peste." Hospitals became morgues, especially the Caracas Vargas Hospital. Since early 1919, thanks to sanitary measures imposed by Razetti, the flu was kept in check and was reducing its virulence. This tragic episode demonstrated that Venezuela was not prepared for an epidemic of this magnitude, and that malnutrition and poverty are factors that contribute to the spread of the disease.
In 1924, he issued a report on excessive infant mortality that cost him nearly a year exile in Curaçao. Moreover, as a biologist, Luis Razetti disclosed essential tasks, since, together with Vicente Marcano, David Lobo, Elías Toro and Guillermo Delgado Palacios, he was part of the first waves of biological positivism in Venezuela. In 1904, he held an intense debate about the legitimacy of the doctrine of descent, which sparked backlash from some members of the scientific community and especially Dr. José Gregorio Hernández. La Doctrina de la Descendencia (The Doctrine of Descent, 1906) and ¿Que es la Vida? (What is Life?, 1907) are books he wrote as a result of this controversy. Perhaps he was, in that sense, the most controversial and edgy of Venezuelan doctors. His name is also synonymous with the Code of Medical Ethics, published in 1928, which had a continental impact. The Cancer Institute of Caracas was named in his honor. His publications, including Manual del antialcoholismo (TheTemperance Crusade Manual) and Higiene social,La cruzada moderna (Social Health: The Modern Crusade, 1907), testify to his pioneering role.
José Gregorio Hernández Cisneros OFS was a Venezuelan physician. Born in Isnotú, Trujillo State, he became a highly renowned doctor, more so after his death. He was beatified by the Catholic Church in 2021.
Guaco is a tropical music band from Venezuela that was formed in Maracaibo by Mario Viloria, Alfonso "Pompo" Aguado, and Fernando Domínguez in 1968. Viloria, the main founder, retired to focus on his college studies; he was the group's main composer for several years. His home was also the main place where practices were held in the group's early years. The name Guaco is attributed a bird named "Guaco" that would fly over Viloria's house every morning. The band began as a gaita zuliana group, and during the 70s diverged from the traditional way of playing the genre by integrating it with elements of salsa music, and adding in violins and electric guitars which were very unusual instruments to be included in a gaita band. Today, the Guaco rhythm continues to evolve through a complex mixture of gaita, salsa, pop music, jazz, funk and even rock and roll and vallenato rhythms, concocting a recognizable and unique style that is considered to be a hallmark of the tropical music genre.
José María Vargas Ponce was the president of Venezuela from 1835 to 1836. Vargas was Venezuela's first civilian president.
The Caracas Base Ball Club C.A. or better known by its commercial name as the Leones del Caracas, is a professional baseball team of the Venezuelan Professional Baseball League. In its creation, its headquarters are the University Stadium of Caracas at the Central University of Venezuela. The owner and sole shareholder of the sports club is Ricardo Cisneros, president of Ateneas Sports Holding.
The Central University of Venezuela is a public university of Venezuela located in Caracas. It is widely held to be the highest ranking institution in the country, and it also ranks 18th in Latin America. Founded in 1721, it is the oldest university in Venezuela and one of the oldest in the Western Hemisphere.
The Islas Los Frailes are an archipelago of rock islets with sparse scrub vegetation belonging to the Federal dependencies of Venezuela, part of Venezuela.
Francisco Javier de Balmis was a Spanish physician best known for leading an 1803 expedition to Spanish America and the Philippines to vaccinate populations against smallpox. His expedition is considered the first international vaccination campaign in history and one of the most important events in the history of medicine. It inspired recent vaccination efforts such as that of Carlos Canseco, president of Rotary International, to start the worldwide program PolioPlus to eradicate polio.
Fernando Antonio Bermúdez Arias is one of Venezuela's most prolific doctor, cardiologist, scientist, writer, teacher, historian, artist and social defender. Born in San Cristobal – Tachira State, he spent most of his life in Maracaibo, Zulia State, Venezuela.
Science and technology in Venezuela includes research based on exploring Venezuela's diverse ecology and the lives of its indigenous peoples.
Miguel Pérez Carreño (1904–1966) was a Venezuelan physician, researcher, scientist, university professor and writer. He was born in Valencia, Carabobo (Venezuela) on September 28, 1904 and died in Caracas on June 22, 1966). He was the son of Venezuelan Government physician, doctor and lawyer Luis Pérez-Carreño and Doña Encarnación Espinal. He was part of a distinguished family, consisting of figures such as Simón Rodríguez and Teresa Carreño. He taught several generations of surgeons. The hospital belonging to the Venezuelan Institute of Social Security, located in El Pescozón to the west of Caracas, bears his name.
The Palacio de las Academias is a Neo-Gothic building on the Avenida Universidad in the centre of Caracas, Venezuela. It dates back to 1684 when a Franciscan convent was built on the site but in the 19th century it served as a barracks, a hospital and a college. In 1876, under President Antonio Guzmán Blanco, the Universidad de Caracas was moved to the building, whose former colonial façade was rebuilt in the Neo-Gothic style. After the university relocated to a new campus in 1952, the building became home to the National Academies. In 1965, it was listed as a national monument. The Palacio de las Academias now houses six National Academies, which are the National Academy of History, the Venezuelan Academy of Language, the Academy of Medicine, the Academy of Political and Social Sciences, the Academy of Jurisprudence, and the Academy of Physics, Mathematics and Nature.
Antonio Briñez[bre'nyez] was a Venezuelan professional baseball player, coach and manager. He batted and threw left handed.
Carlos Arvelo Guevara was known for being a distinguished professor, and the first military doctor of Venezuela, and he played an important role in establishing health services in the country. Many places were named after him like the municipality of Carlos Arvelo since 1936, and the military hospital of Carlos Arvelo located in Caracas.
José Manuel Olivares is a Venezuelan politician and oncologist. In 2015, he was elected deputy of the National Assembly from Vargas. He is the president of the National Assembly's Health Subcommission, where he has spearheaded the National Health Crisis Provision Law and directed humanitarian aid to counteract the effects of the medicine shortage in Venezuela. He is also the president of the Permanent Commission on Integral Family Development. Olivares has been a major figure in the opposition movement against the government of Nicolás Maduro. In June 2018, Olivares and his family fled to Colombia, where he has helped direct the shipment of humanitarian aid to Venezuela.
Francisco Narváez was commissioned to create pieces for the University City of Caracas campus in 1949, initially working between 1950 and 1953, with other pieces added later. The artworks include stone and metal statues, busts, reliefs, and various material of murals. Three of the statues are made of Cumarebo stone: El Atleta, a large statue in the sports complex, and La educación and La ciencia in the medical complex. The Cumarebo stone is a favourite material of Narváez. Two sculptures of the esteemed doctor José Gregorio Hernández and President José María Vargas grace the campus grounds.
The Revolution of the Reforms was a military movement in Venezuela between June 7, 1835, and March 1, 1836, against the government of José María Vargas, the conservative Congress, and the influence of José Antonio Páez. It was led by outstanding independence heroes such as Santiago Mariño, Diego Ibarra, Pedro Briceño Méndez, José Laurencio Silva, José María Melo, Blas Bruzual, Luis Perú de Lacroix, Pedro Carujo, José Tadeo Monagas, Renato Beluche, Andrés Level de Goda, and Estanislao Rendon.
Juan Abarca Campal is a Spanish physician and surgeon, businessman and founder of the HM Hospitales group.
Pablo Acosta Ortiz (1864–1914) was an Venezuelan Doctor, academic, surgeon, Politician and College professor known as the magician of the scalpel and considered the founder of modern surgery in Venezuela. the greatest Venezuelan surgeon of his generation, attended the 4th and 5th Pan American Sanitary Conferences as a representative of Venezuela.
The Pablo Acosta Ortiz square or Altagraciasquare is a public space located in the city of Barquisimeto in the center west of Venezuela, more specifically in the state of Lara. One of the best known and most emblematic space of the city. It bears the name and bust over a marble pedestal of the highest exponent of Venezuelan medicine the famous doctor, Pablo Acosta Ortiz. The square is located in front of the Altagracia church.