Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Ephraim McDowell ~ Frontier Surgeon


A world-renowned surgeon stands at his patient’s bedside and delivers a dire diagnosis; he informs her that major surgery is required to save her life, then explains the risks of that surgery.

           

 

It’s easy to imagine this scene playing out today in any large urban hospital. But what if I told you that the scenario I described happened over a two hundred years ago in a tiny log cabin in the Kentucky wilderness?


           

 

 

Dr. Ephraim McDowell
 

The year is 1809 and the surgeon is Dr. Ephraim McDowell. The surgery he is proposing to his patient, Mrs. Jane Crawford, is the one, slim hope of saving her life, though it is far more likely to result in a death sentence for them both.

           

 

 

 
 
 
Ephraim McDowell had apprenticed under Dr. Alexander Humphreys, a graduate of the prestigious University of Edinburg, Scotland where McDowell also studied for a year. By December of 1809, ten years into his practice, Dr. McDowell is considered the leading surgeon on the Kentucky frontier. So when two local doctors fail to induce the labor of Mrs. Jane Crawford, whom they've diagnosed with an overdue pregnancy, they call in Dr. McDowell.

           

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
After traveling on horseback sixty miles through snow and ice to the Crawford cabin, Dr. McDowell examines his patient. He quickly realizes that he is not dealing with an overdue pregnancy, but a deadly enlarged ovarian cyst. The doctor is prepared to give his patient the grim news that there is nothing he can do to save her, but she begs him to try to remove the life-threatening tumor. McDowell is well aware that no such a surgery has ever before been attempted, and that to do what his patient is asking of him would be considered tantamount to butchery and murder. At the same time, he has long believed that if carefully and properly executed, such a surgery could be successful. After all, animals routinely survive spaying. With both their lives on the line, McDowell agrees to attempt the dangerous surgery if Jane will agree to travel back to Danville with him.

           

 
 

 
Jane agrees to make the trip and on Christmas Day 1809, Dr. Ephraim McDowell, with the help of his nephew, Dr. James McDowell, successfully removes a twenty-two-pound tumor from the abdomen of Jane Todd Crawford. With only opium for anesthetic, Jane sings hymns to take her mind off the pain of the surgery. Outside the McDowell home, incensed neighbors prepare to hang the doctor whom they believe is committing murder within.

           

 





Jane Todd Crawford
 
To the astonishment of everyone, including Dr. McDowell, Jane Crawford survives the surgery. Five days later, Dr. McDowell is both astonished and horrified to find his patient on her feet and making her own bed. Upon her recovery, Jane returns to her husband and children and eventually moves with them to the Indiana wilderness where she lives another thirty-two years to the age of seventy-nine.
 

           

 

 
 
For his actions, Dr. Ephraim McDowell became known as the founding father of abdominal surgery. His groundbreaking procedure performed on Jane Todd Crawford on Christmas Day 1809 removed not only the woman’s tumor, but the belief that a person could not survive having the abdominal cavity opened. Because of the courage of Dr.McDowell and Jane Crawford, abdominal surgery has saved countless lives over the past two hundred years. Today, both the pioneering surgeon and his brave patient have hospitals named for them in their respective home towns; the Ephraim McDowell Regional Medical Center in Danville, Kentucky and the Jane Todd Crawford Memorial Hospital in Greensburg, Kentucky.
 
 
The home of Dr. Ephraim McDowell in Danville, Kentucky, is now a museum and historical site.  

Dr. Ephraim McDowell House, Danville, Kentucky
  













In 2007, I became a recipient of Dr. McDowell's and Jane Crawford's legacies when I underwent successful surgery for stage 1 uterine cancer. Seven years later, I remain cancer-free. Have you or a loved one had lifesaving abdominal surgery? I'd love to hear your story.
      
 
 
 









 




Ramona K. Cecil is a poet and award-winning author of historical fiction for the Christian market. A proud Hoosier, she often sets her stories in her home state of Indiana.

 
                                           


Check out her out her latest releases at www.ramonakcecil.com
 
                                                                       
         
                 

                                                                                   

16 comments:

  1. Wow! What brave souls! This was a fantastic article, Ramona. Thanks for sharing!

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    1. Thanks, Debbie Lynne. I haven't yet visited the McDowell home in Danville, but that is definitely on my "to do" list.

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  2. Great post, Ramona. Medical history always fascinates me and this is amazing! Not sure I would have been as brave as Mrs. Crawford. Beautiful home, too. Thanks.

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    1. Thanks, Martha. I'm sure I wouldn't have been that brave. The thought of any surgery is scary, even today, but the notion of having abdominal surgery with no anesthetic is terrifying!

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  3. In the spring of 2000 I was working on a rental house we'd just purchased and struck by intense pain in my abdomen, I doubled over, unable to stand up straight. After many trips to several doctors and the hospital, a very large tumor was discovered on my ovary. I was scheduled for surgery. The doctor was certain it was benign because it was so large. However, when they got into the abdominal cavity, they discovered two tumors, one on each ovary--one about the size of a cantaloupe, the other the size of a grapefruit. And they were malignant, but contained. Stage one. One broke upon removal and spilled into my abdominal cavity, so I had to undergo chemo, but here I am, 14 years later. healthy and cancer free. :) I literally owe my life to those who pioneered in this field. Thank you, Jesus!

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    1. Oh my word!! You had exactly the same condition as Jane Crawford! Praise the Lord that the option of surgery was there for you. All of us who have had lifesaving abdominal surgery owe a great debt of gratitude to Dr. McDowell and Jane Crawford! Stay well, lady!

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  4. That's an awesome post, Ramona. I had no idea! Definite fodder for the imagination of a historical novelist. :-)

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    1. Loved this article, Ramona! I'm always fascinated by medical history both here and around the world. I've never had abdominal surgery and hope I never have need of it. But I'd rather have it done in this day and age then in 1809!

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    2. Thanks, Naomi. The hero of my first novel was a frontier doctor and I actually learned about Dr. McDowell during my research.

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    3. Thanks, Jillian! I'm certainly glad my surgery was in 2007 instead of 1809!

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  5. Ramona, thank you for a marvelous post. Medicine and technology have come so far, we often forget the times they were new and often dangerous.

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    1. Thanks, Linda. We owe a lot to those brave souls who came before us, that's for sure!

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    1. I agree, Rebecca! I don't think I would have had that kind of courage.

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    2. Hi, Maxie! I'm glad you enjoyed the post. I must agree, this is one of the most amazing stories of medical history I've ever read. Thanks for stopping by!

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  7. What a story. We owe so much to doctors like this and this brave that was willing to take a chance to live. And, glory to God for letting so many learn to do such great things. For we know His hand is in these sorts of things. I really found thid post interesting Romona. Thanks! Maxie > mac262(at)me(dot)com


















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