UCLA LOUISE M. DARLING BIOMEDICAL LIBRARYHISTORY & SPECIAL COLLECTIONS HISTORY & SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
Home
Collections
Online Exhibits & Projects
Programs
Fellowships & Prizes
Overview & History
Internet Resources
Policies & Use
Staff
Credits
History & Special Collections
UCLA Louise M. Darling Biomedical Library
12-077 CHS, Box 951798
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1798
Tel: 310/825-6940
Fax: 310/825-0465

Bloodletting

Woman with leeches Bossche, Willem van den. Historia Medica (Bruxellae, 1639). For many centuries, blood-letting was considered a tried and true remedy for certain conditions. It was recommended for fevers, inflammations, a variety of disease conditions and, ironically, for hemorrhage. Although it fell in and out of favor, it persisted into the 20th century and was even recommended by Sir William Osler in the 1923 edition his Principles and Practice of Medicine.
Presented here is a brief selection of material, in word and image, on bloodletting. The text is from a mid-19th century proponent of the treatment, Henry Clutterbuck M.D., Member of the Royal College of Physicians. Clutterbuck in his book, On the Proper Administration of Blood-Letting, for the Prevention and Cure of Disease, (London, 1840), gives a brief history and outlines the proper use of the treatment. The images of bloodletting, the recommended sites for letting blood and the instruments or animals used for the procedure are out of books from the collection of the History Division of the Louise M. Darling Biomedical Library, UCLA.

Images

Support for the online exhibit provided by:

31 January 2002

History & Special Collections
UCLA Louise M. Darling Biomedical Library
12-077 CHS, Box 951798
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1798
Tel: 310/825-6940
Fax: 310/825-0465
 
©2002 The Regents of the University of California