the bad dominicana

porque soy terrible. afrolatina. culture clash. dominican republic meets nyc. ghetto/barrio nerd. raging womanist.

**note: most of my content prolly requires a TW and will be NSFW.
also, read my "before you follow" statement at the top, before you do so, and enter at your own motherfuckin risk.
porque soy terrible. afrolatina. culture clash. dominican republic meets nyc. ghetto/barrio nerd. raging womanist.

**note: most of my content prolly requires a TW and will be NSFW.
also, read my "before you follow" statement at the top, before you do so, and enter at your own motherfuckin risk.
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stfuconservatives:

fyeahblackhistory:

AN EXAMPLE OF AFRICAN MEDICAL SCIENCE. ILLUSTRATION OF AFRICAN DOCTORS IN 19TH CENTURY (1879) KAHARA,UGANDA PERFORMING A CAESARIAN SECTION. THIS OPERATION WAS UNKNOWN IN EUROPE AT THE TIME.
Africans were performing many advanced medical procedures long before they had been conceived in Europe this is just one of many examples.
The British traveler R.W. Felkin who reported this noted that the healer used banana wine to semi-intoxicate the woman and to cleanse his hands and her abdomen prior to surgery. He used a midline incision and applied cautery to minimize hemorrhaging. He massaged the uterus to make it contract but did not suture it; the abdominal wound was pinned with iron needles and dressed with a paste prepared from roots. The patient recovered well, and Felkin concluded that this technique was well-developed and had clearly been employed for a long time. Similar reports come from Rwanda, where botanical preparations were also used to anesthetize the patient and promote wound healing.
Referece: “Notes on Labour in Central Africa” published in the Edinburgh Medical Journal, volume 20, April 1884, pages 922-930.
Click here for more.

This is fascinating. Many (white) people think that Europe was the only place making technological and medical advancements, and all the brown people in other places were just wallowing in cave man times (such as: people claming Native Americans are ‘lucky’ that Europeans came here and ‘civilized’ them). Not true, at all.
However, cesarean sections were certainly known in Europe at the time. Cutting live babies out of dead/dying mothers was a practice that dates back to the birth of Julius Caesar (allegedly the reason we call it a cesarean section, although other reports state his mother survived the birth). I’m obviously not an expert on the history of c-sections, but I would imagine that some form of c-sections were taking place in every society around the world. Successful c-sections in Europe date back to the Middle Ages. I saw an exhibit at the Royal College of Surgeons in Chicago last year, and I remember seeing paintings of doctors administering c-sections around the 1500s.
Interestingly, c-sections were more successful (ie the mother lived more often) when they were performed outside of hospitals — like in the drawing above. Before modern antibacterial technology, getting cut open in a hospital usually meant contracting a deadly infection from another patient. And according to this book from the US National Library of Medicine, in rural areas or places without hospitals, c-sections would get started sooner and the mother and fetus were less distressed, which also contributed to their higher success rate.
But, yes, this illustration is proof that advances in medicine are not unique to Western culture.
-Jess

Another piece of history that needs to be known and shared.

    medeaismyfavourite:

    stfuconservatives:

    fyeahblackhistory:

    AN EXAMPLE OF AFRICAN MEDICAL SCIENCE. ILLUSTRATION OF AFRICAN DOCTORS IN 19TH CENTURY (1879) KAHARA,UGANDA PERFORMING A CAESARIAN SECTION. THIS OPERATION WAS UNKNOWN IN EUROPE AT THE TIME.

    Africans were performing many advanced medical procedures long before they had been conceived in Europe this is just one of many examples.

    The British traveler R.W. Felkin who reported this noted that the healer used banana wine to semi-intoxicate the woman and to cleanse his hands and her abdomen prior to surgery. He used a midline incision and applied cautery to minimize hemorrhaging. He massaged the uterus to make it contract but did not suture it; the abdominal wound was pinned with iron needles and dressed with a paste prepared from roots. The patient recovered well, and Felkin concluded that this technique was well-developed and had clearly been employed for a long time. Similar reports come from Rwanda, where botanical preparations were also used to anesthetize the patient and promote wound healing.

    Referece: “Notes on Labour in Central Africa” published in the Edinburgh Medical Journal, volume 20, April 1884, pages 922-930.

    Click here for more.

    This is fascinating. Many (white) people think that Europe was the only place making technological and medical advancements, and all the brown people in other places were just wallowing in cave man times (such as: people claming Native Americans are ‘lucky’ that Europeans came here and ‘civilized’ them). Not true, at all.

    However, cesarean sections were certainly known in Europe at the time. Cutting live babies out of dead/dying mothers was a practice that dates back to the birth of Julius Caesar (allegedly the reason we call it a cesarean section, although other reports state his mother survived the birth). I’m obviously not an expert on the history of c-sections, but I would imagine that some form of c-sections were taking place in every society around the world. Successful c-sections in Europe date back to the Middle Ages. I saw an exhibit at the Royal College of Surgeons in Chicago last year, and I remember seeing paintings of doctors administering c-sections around the 1500s.

    Interestingly, c-sections were more successful (ie the mother lived more often) when they were performed outside of hospitals — like in the drawing above. Before modern antibacterial technology, getting cut open in a hospital usually meant contracting a deadly infection from another patient. And according to this book from the US National Library of Medicine, in rural areas or places without hospitals, c-sections would get started sooner and the mother and fetus were less distressed, which also contributed to their higher success rate.

    But, yes, this illustration is proof that advances in medicine are not unique to Western culture.

    -Jess

    Another piece of history that needs to be known and shared.

    (via cijithgeek-deactivated20121104)

    Source: nlm.nih.gov
    • May 16, 2012 (6:47 pm)
    • 1737 notes
    1. va-lynn-tine reblogged this from theboredboi
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    22. scandaleyezz reblogged this from holler4mydoller and added:
      Amazing
    23. scandaleyezz likes this
    24. holler4mydoller reblogged this from diasporicroots and added:
      Wow! History is everything.
    25. holler4mydoller likes this
    26. aaarmss likes this
    27. thealienarchetype reblogged this from fuckyeah19thcenturyscience
    28. thefuturesweetheart reblogged this from qu33riousity
    29. unabletoinhale likes this
    30. givemejellyfishshots reblogged this from fuckmeinparadise
    31. fuckmeinparadise reblogged this from c0nsumingnarc0tics
    32. c0nsumingnarc0tics reblogged this from wynaut
    33. wynaut reblogged this from stfuconservatives
    34. cocollage reblogged this from diasporicroots and added:
      While I’m not qualified to speak to whether caesarian sections...or America at the time,...
    35. peacefulgrooveechick likes this
    36. md-sx reblogged this from sempre--fedele
    37. sempre--fedele reblogged this from jungz
    38. rasta-gnosis reblogged this from alkebulanfleur
    39. alkebulanfleur reblogged this from jungz
    40. jungz reblogged this from endofbabylon
    41. ageofrespect reblogged this from qu33riousity and added:
      So much history to learn. I was terrible at the BS history they tried to teach me in school, at least the real stuff...
    42. jayggurl likes this
    43. krisguinelae likes this
    44. eleanorwinter likes this
    45. lilacbootlaces likes this
    46. notyrqueer reblogged this from qu33riousity and added:
      This at a time when European proponents of germ theory were still struggling to get surgeons to wash their hands. -_-
    47. liveforeverdienever reblogged this from ohthepretty
    48. whatclaptrap likes this
    49. ohthepretty reblogged this from qu33riousity
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