Author | Virginia Wright-Peterson |
---|---|
Published | 2016 |
Publisher | Minnesota Historical Society |
ISBN | 978-1-68134-001-2 |
OCLC | 942710568 |
Women of Mayo Clinic: The Founding Generation is a 2016 non-fiction book by Virginia M. Wright-Peterson, chronicling the individual contributions of professional women who helped establish and develop the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. Covering a period of 60 years, the Sisters of Saint Francis of Rochester, Minnesota worked in conjunction with the Mayo family to open a hospital that would accept patients of all faiths. Beginning with a 27-bed facility, the women physicians and other medical professionals would eventually serve in theaters of war, and create an environment that evolved according to patient needs. Wright-Peterson is a faculty member of the University of Minnesota Rochester, and a former Mayo Clinic administrator. [1]
Disaster struck Rochester, Minnesota on August 21, 1883, when an estimated-F5 tornado devastated the area. With the exception of facilities in Minneapolis-Saint Paul, the state of Minnesota only had three hospitals. Rochester had no medical facilities at that time. [2] Mother Mary Alfred Moes of the Sisters of St. Francis assisted doctors William Mayo and his two sons, William (Dr. Will) and Charles, in caring for the victims. The devastation highlighted the need for a hospital in the Rochester area. The Mayo family and the Sisters of St. Francis worked conjointly to establish a facility open to all without regard to religious affiliation. Dr. William Mayo selected the site, with he and his sons touring hospitals for architectural concepts to best suit their vision. Mother Alfred raised $40.000, and supervised the construction. Initially named St. Mary's Hospital when it opened in 1889, [3] it would eventually become part of the Mayo Clinic after the latter's founding in 1892.
The hospital was small by modern standards, only 27 beds. The facility's first nurse and anesthesiologist Edith Graham, was hired and trained in the operating room by Dr. William Mayo. She in turn trained the Sisters as operating room nurses, and would eventually marry Dr. Charles Mayo. [4] Sisters Sienna Otto, Constantine Koupal, Fidelis Cashion, Hyacinth Quinlan, Fabian Halloran, and Sylvester Burke attended to the needs of the patients 24/7, doing double duty as surgical assistants. Sister Joseph (Julia Dempsey) served in a dual capacity as hospital administrator and Dr. Will's surgical assistant. [5]
The hospital hired without regard to gender. Dr. Gertrude Booker Granger became the hospital's first woman physician in 1898. Physicians Harriet Preston and Ida Clarke were soon added. Nurse Alice Magaw oversaw the anesthesiology department. Dr. Isabella Coler Herb of the Augustana Hospital in Chicago was brought in to organize the pathology department in 1899, the first female specialist in her field. [6] Taking over the lab work previously done by the physicians themselves, she was assisted by the third generation of the Mayo family, granddaughters Daisy Berkman and Helen Berkman.
The Mayo had no functional library when Maud Mellish Wilson [7] joined as director of publications in 1907. Put in charge of new acquisitions, and preserving papers written by the Mayo doctors, she taught the staff in research practices, and presentation methods. She married the clinic's chief of pathology Louis B. Wilson, and they anonymously wrote Sketch of the History of the Mayo Clinic and the Mayo Foundation. In 1909, she instituted publishing of the annual The Collected Papers of the Mayo Clinic. In 1929, she published the instructional guide The Writing of Medical Papers. [8] Mabel Root became part of the team in 1907, organizing the system for physician records keeping, adding color coding and number assignment to facilitate ease of use.
Four months before the 1914 outbreak of World War I, the Mayo moved to a new building in Rochester. Dr. Gertrude Granger became deputy director of public health. Dr. Leda Stacy was given her own area where she would establish radium therapy. Dutch pathologist Dr. Georgine Luden was added to the staff during this period. Maud Mellish Wilson began hiring more women photographers for the art studio.
After the outbreak of war, the Mayo Clinic deployed teams of nurses to the war front. St. Mary's Nursing School graduate Florence Church Bullard (1880–1967) joined the Red Cross, [9] and was assigned to Evacuation Hospital 13. Continuing there through 1919, Bullard was the first American woman to be recognized by the French government for bravery, receiving the Croix de guerre and bronze star. [10]
In 1915, Doctors Charlie and Will Mayo donated $1.5 million to the University of Minnesota, to foster a program allowing the clinic's doctors to earn master's and doctoral degrees. One of the first graduates was pathologist Della Drips, specializing in gynecologic endocrinology. During the Spanish flu pandemic, Sister Joseph and the Sisters of Saint Francis purchased the nearby Lincoln Hotel and converted it into an isolation hospital in October 1917. By May 1918, when the menace had run its course, 360 patients had been hospitalized and 41 had died.
What there was in the way of social services at the Mayo had been provided at the registration desk by Willa Murray and Cora Olson. Ida Maud Cannon, chief of social services at Massachusetts General Hospital, began training candidates for a new direction in the Mayo's services. Charlotte Bundy was the first to accept the challenge of the clinic's social work. With support from the Mayo, Bundy and nursing student Isabella Gooding set up their practice at the Colonial Hospital. [11] After Bundy married and moved to Scotland, Priscilla Keely became the director. The unit began surveying patients to learn the diverse needs. Services such as a lending library, financial assistance, occupational therapy, and a language interpreter were considered part of the holistic healing of the patient. Cuban-born Beatriz Montes was hired as a language interpreter for Spanish-speaking patients.
After being selected by Sister Joseph at a chance meeting on a hospital tour, Anna Jamme was trained as a nurse. She would later institute the Saint Marys School of Nursing, and become its first administrator. Graduating from the school in 1918, Sister Domitilla, born Lillian DuRocher became hospital administrator in 1939. United States Army medical corp veteran Mary Foley worked at the diet kitchen at the Kahler Corporation, when she became acquainted with Dr. Will Mayo. He hired her for the Mayo, where she instituted the dietetics program for outpatients. Anatomical sculptor Nellie Starkson created presentation 3D wax anatomical images. During her time at the Mayo, pathologist Winifred Ashby developed the Ashby technique for determining red blood cell survival. [12]
Sister Joseph, who retired as a surgical assistant in 1915, and the Sisters of Saint Francis of Rochester, had financed hospital expansions in 1894, 1898, 1904, 1909, 1912 and 1922. Between the year years 1913 and 1914, the patient load increased 2600%. A new surgical building, complete with amphitheater for student procedures viewing, opened on Florence Nightingale’s birthday in 1922. [13] Another new building was added in 1928. Over the ensuing years, the patient load has continued to rise, as have the opportunities for women in the medical profession.
Reviews on Goodreads - 44% gave it a 5-star rating; 48%, gave it a 4-star rating [14]
Seven people reviewed the book on Amazon.com, all of whom gave the book 5 stars out of a possible 5.
A young aspiring writer and 7th grade student when she read the book, created a board game about the individual women. "The women of Mayo Clinic are empowering and encouraging. These women did amazing things, and it makes me realize I can, too." the young woman told the clinic. [16]
MedCity Beat said, "These stories of more than 40 incredible women have now been artfully recounted by local writer and teacher Virginia Wright-Peterson in her new book, Women of Mayo Clinic: The Founding Generation." [17]
The Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit American academic medical center focused on integrated health care, education, and research. It employs over 4,500 physicians and scientists, along with another 58,400 administrative and allied health staff, across three major campuses: Rochester, Minnesota; Jacksonville, Florida; and Phoenix/Scottsdale, Arizona. The practice specializes in treating difficult cases through tertiary care and destination medicine. It is home to the top-15 ranked Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine in addition to many of the highest regarded residency education programs in the United States. It spends over $660 million a year on research and has more than 3,000 full-time research personnel.
The Mayo Clinic Hospital – Rochester is a 2,059-bed teaching hospital located in Rochester, Minnesota. It comprises the Saint Marys Campus with its Mayo Eugenio Litta Children's Hospital, as well as its Methodist Campus, forming an integral part of the Mayo Clinic academic medical center. Mayo Clinic Hospital – Rochester is ranked first on the 2019–20 U.S. News & World Report Best Hospitals Honor Roll.
A Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA) is a type of advanced practice nurse who administers anesthesia in the United States. CRNAs account for approximately half of the anesthesia providers in the United States and are the main providers (80%) of anesthesia in rural America. Historically, nurse anesthetists have been providing anesthesia care to patients since the American Civil War and the CRNA credential came into existence in 1956. CRNA schools issue a doctorate of nursing anesthesia degree to nurses who have completed a program in anesthesia, which is roughly 3 years in length.
William Worrall Mayo was an English medical doctor and chemist. He is best known for establishing the private medical practice that later evolved into the Mayo Clinic. He was a descendant of a famous English chemist, John Mayow. His sons, William James Mayo and Charles Horace Mayo, established a joint medical practice in Rochester in the U.S. state of Minnesota in the 1880s.
William James Mayo was a physician and surgeon in the United States and one of the seven founders of the Mayo Clinic. He and his brother, Charles Horace Mayo, both joined their father's private medical practice in Rochester, Minnesota, US, after graduating from medical school in the 1880s. In 1919, that practice became the not-for-profit Mayo Clinic.
Henry Stanley Plummer was an American internist and endocrinologist who, along with William Mayo, Charles Mayo, Augustus Stinchfield, E. Starr Judd, Christopher Graham, and Donald Balfour founded Mayo Clinic. Plummer is also immortalized as the driving force behind the Plummer Building, which still stands as a part of the Clinic he helped establish.
The Sisters of Saint Francis of Rochester, Minnesota is a Roman Catholic religious congregation for women. The congregation was founded in 1877 by Mother Mary Alfred Moes in the Diocese of St. Paul of Minnesota. The motherhouse, which is in Rochester, Minnesota, is called Assisi Heights.
Henry D. Tazelaar is a lung, heart and transplant pathologist.
Alice Magaw (1860–1928) was an American nurse known for her work on anesthesia. Her innovations helped lead to major advances in modern surgery and earned her the title of the 'mother of anesthesia.'
David Carl Dahlin, Jr. was a North American physician and pathologist who trained and worked at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota for virtually his entire career in medicine. He was internationally recognized as an expert diagnostician with regard to tumors of the musculoskeletal system—especially the bones, but was also an experienced and skilled general surgical pathologist.
Melvin Starkey Henderson (1883–1954) was an American orthopedic surgeon, who was born in St. Paul, Minnesota (USA).
Mayo Clinic School of Health Sciences (MCSHS), formerly known as Mayo School of Health Sciences (MSHS), is an accredited, private, nonprofit school of higher education specializing in allied health education. MCSHS operates within the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science, which is the educational division of Mayo Clinic. As such, MCSHS is fully integrated with Mayo Clinic hospitals and clinics.
Louis Blanchard Wilson was an American pathologist and the chief of pathology at Mayo Clinic from 1905 to 1937. Wilson is most famous for initiating the routine use of the frozen section procedure for rapid intraoperative diagnosis.
Mayo Clinic Health System is a system of community-based medical facilities. It is owned by Mayo Clinic and was founded in 1992. The organization focuses on providing medical care in rural communities in Minnesota, Iowa, and Wisconsin. As of 2022, its facilities include 16 hospitals, 53 multispecialty clinics and one mobile health clinic. The President of Mayo Clinic Health System is Prathibha Varkey.
Donald Guthrie was an American surgeon, best known for establishing Guthrie Clinic in Sayre, Pennsylvania in 1910. One of nation's earliest multi-specialty group medical practices, Guthrie based the formation of the clinic that bears his name on the principles he learned while a surgical resident at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota.
Julia Dempsey, better known as Sister Mary Joseph, was an American religious sister, nurse and hospital administrator.
The Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine (MCASOM), formerly known as Mayo Medical School (MMS), is a research-oriented medical school based in Rochester, Minnesota, with additional campuses in Arizona and Florida. MCASOM is a school within the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science (MCCMS), the education division of the Mayo Clinic. It grants the Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) degree, accredited by the Higher Learning Commission (HLC) and the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME). In November 2018, the school was renamed in honor of a $200 million donation from businessman Jay Alix.
Lyla Mae Olson (1895–1964) was an American nurse who wrote several books on practical public health and home nursing, including ways to make the equipment needed. She is best known in the 21st century as the inspiration for the "Olson mask," variants of which are one of the most popular for cloth masks worn during the COVID-19 novel coronavirus outbreak.
Florence Church Bullard (1880–1967) was an American nurse and recipient of the French Croix de Guerre with a bronze star. Trained at St. Mary's Hospital Nursing School in Rochester, Minnesota, she served with the American Red Cross in the American Volunteer Motor Ambulance Corps.
Isabella Coler Herb was an American medical pioneer in the fields of pathology and anesthesiology. Her career spanned more than half a century, ending with her retirement in 1941. She was the first woman physician to specialize in anesthesiology, and the first Mayo Clinic specialist in her areas of expertise. In 1933, Herb designed the Herb–Mueller apparatus for administering ether to patients. She was the head of the Department of Anesthesia at Presbyterian Hospital, and the first woman president of the American Association of Anesthetists.
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