Biography of Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis
Original name: Ignác Fülöp Semmelweis
Whonamedit.com (undated)
Hungarian physician, born July 1, 1818, Taban, Buda, Hungary, Austria-Hungary;
died August 13, 1865, Wien.
Associated eponyms:
Semmelweis' method
Disinfection of the hands of the obstetrician or midwife with chloride or lime,
as well as clean bedsheaths for the patient, in order to prevent puerperal
fever.
The Semmelweis' reflex
Mob behavior found among primates and larval hominids on undeveloped planets, in
which a discovery of important scientific fact is punished rather than rewarded.
Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis was one of the most prominent medical figures of
his time. His discovery concerning the etiology and prevention of puerperal
fever was a brilliant example of fact-finding, meaningful statistical analysis,
and keen inductive reasoning. The highly successful prophylactic hand washings
made him a pioneer in antisepsis during the pre-bacteriological era in spite of
deliberate opposition and uninformed resistance.
Semmelweis was born in Tabán, an old commercial sector of Buda. He was the
fifth child of a prosperous shopkeeper of German origin whose family can be
traced back to the 17. century. He received his elementary education at the
Catholic Gymnasium of Buda, then completed his schooling at the University of
Pest between 1835 and 1837.
In the fall of 1837, Semmelweis travelled to Vienna, ostensibly to enroll in its
law school in order to comply with his father’s wish that he become a military
advocate in the service of the Austrian bureaucracy. Soon after his arrival,
however, he was attracted to medicine; and seemingly without parental opposition
he matriculated in the medical school.
After completing his first year of studies at Vienna, Semmelweis returned to
Pest and continued at the local university during the academic years 1839-1841.
The backward conditions in the school, however, caused his return to Vienna in
1841 for further studies at what is known as the Second Vienna Medical School.
This school became one of the leading centers for almost a century with its
amalgation of laboratory and bedside medicine. During the last two years of the
study, Semmelweis came in close contact with three of the most promising figures
of the new school, Karl von Rokitansky (1804-1878), Josef Skoda (1805-1881), and
Ferdinand von Hebra (1816-1880).
After voluntarily attending seminars led by these teachers, Semmelweis completed
his botanically oriented dissertation early in 1844. He remained in Vienna after
graduation, repeating a two-month course in practical midwifery and receiving a
master’s – Magister - degree in the subject. He also completed some surgical
training and spent almost fifteen months (October 1844 – February 1846) with
Skoda learning diagnostic and statistical methods. Finally Semmelweis applied
for the position of assistant in the First Obstetrical Clinic of the
university’s teaching institution, The Vienna General Hospital (Wien
Allgemeines Krankenhaus).
Semmelweis soon concerned himself with the problem of puerperal fever, the
scourge of 19th century European birth clinics. Most women at the time delivered
at home, but those who had to take to the hospitals, due to poverty,
illegitimacy, or birth complications, suffered a mortality of 25-30 percent.
Some physicians believed the infection to be caused by crowdedness, poor
ventilation, beginning lactation, or misma. Despite strong resistance from his
superior, who had the accepted the disease as non-preventable, Semmelweis
commenced his work on finding the causes of the misery.
In July 1846 Semmelweis became the titular house officer of the First Clinic,
which was then under the direction of professor Johann Klein (1788-1856). Among
his numerous duties were the instruction of medical students, assistance at
surgical procedures, and the regular performane of all clinical examinations.
One of the most pressing problems facing him was the high maternal and neonatal
mortality due to puerperal fever, 13.10 percent. Curiously, however, the Second
Obstetrical Clinic in the same hospital exhibited a much lower mortality rate,
2.03 percent. The only difference between them lay in their function. The first
was the teaching service for medical students, while the Second had been
selected in 1839 for the instruction of midwives. Although everyone was baffled
by the contrasting mortality figures, no clear explanation for the differences
were forthcoming. The disease was considered to be an inevitable aspect of
contemporary hospital-based obstetrics, a product of unknown agents operating in
conjunction with elusive athmospheric conditions.
After a temporary demotion to allow the reinstatement of his predecessor, who
soon left Vienna for a professorship at Tübingen, Semmelweis resumed his post
in March 1847. During his short vacation in Venice, the tragic death of his
friend Jakob Kolletschka (1803-1847), professor of forensic medicine at Vienna,
occurred after his finger was accidentally punctured with a knife during a
postmortem examination. Interestingly, Kolletschka’s own autopsy revealed a
pathological situation akin to that of the women who were dying from puerperal
fever.
Prepared through his intensive pathological training with Rokitansky, who had
placed all cadavers from the gynecology ward at his disposal for dissection,
Semmelweis made a crucial association. He promptly connected the idea of
cadaveric contamination with puerperal fever, and made a detailed study of the
mortality statistics of both obstetrical clinics. He concluded that he and the
students carried the infecting particles on their hands from the autopsy room to
the patients they examined during labor. This startling hypothesis led
Semmelweis to devise a novel system of prophylaxis in May 1847.
Realizing that the cadaveric smell emanating from the hands of the dissectors
reflected the presence of the incriminated poisenous matter, he instituted the
use of a solution of chlorinated lime for washing hands between autopsy work and
examination of patients. Despite early protests, especially from the medical
students and hospital staff, Semmelweis was able to enforce the new procedure
vigorously; and in barely one month the mortality from puerperal fever declined
in his clinic from 12.24 percent to 2.38 percent. A subsequent temporary
resurgence of the dreaded ailment was traced to contamination with putrid
material from a patient suffering from uterine cancer and another with a knee
infection.
In March and August no women died of puerperal fever in semmelweis’
department. The younger physicians of Vienna understood the importance of his
discovery and supported him. His superior however, was critical, an probably so
simply because he did not understand Semmelweis.
In spite of the dramatic practical results of his washings, Semmelweis refused
to communicate his method officially to the learned circles of Vienna, nor was
he eager to explain it on paper. Hence, Ferdinand von Hebra finally wrote two
articles in his behalf, explaining the etiology of puerperal fever and strongly
recommending use of chlorinated lime as a preventive. Although foreign
physicians and the leading members of the Viennese school were impressed by
Semmelweis’ apparent discovery, the papers failed to generate widespread
support.
During 1848 Semmelweis gradually widened his prophylaxis to include all
instruments coming in contact with patients in labor. He statistically
documented success in virtually eliminating puerperal fever from the hospital
ward led to efforts by Skoda to create an official commission to investigate the
results. The proposal was ultimately rejected by the Ministry of Education,
however, a casualty of the political struggle between the defeated liberals of
the 1848 movement and the newly empowered conservatives in both the university
and the government bureaucracy.
Angered by favorable reports concerning the new methods that indirectly
represented an indictment of his own beliefs and actions, Klein refused to
reappoint Semmelweis in March 1849. Undaunted, Semmelweis applied for an unpaid
instructorship in midwifery. In the meantime he began to carry out animal
experiments to prove his clinical conclusions with the aid of the physiologist
Ernst Brücke and a grant from the Vienna Academy of Sciences.
In 1848 a liberal revolution swept Europe, and Semmelweis took part in the
events in Vienna. After the revolution had been defeated, Semmelweis found that
his political activities had created further obstacles for his profession work.
In 1849 he was fired from his position in the clinic. He then applied for a
position at the school of midwifery, but was rejected.
The first account of Semmelweis discovery was published by professor Ferdinand
Hebra in December 1847, in the Zeitschrift der kaiserlich-königlichen
Gesellschaft der Ärzte zu Wien (December 1847) followed by a supplementary
statement from the same physician in April 1848. In October 1849, Professor
Josef Soda delivered an address upon the same subject in the Imperial and Royal
Academy of Sciences. Unfortunately, Semmelweis had neglected to correct the
papers of these friends of his, and thus failed to make known their mistakes, so
that the interference might be drawn that only infection from septic virus
caused puerperal fever.
At last, however, Semmelweis was persuaded to present his findings “On the
Origin of Puerperal Fever” personally to the local medical community. On May
15, 1850, he delivered a lecture to the Association of Physicians in Vienna,
meeting under the presidency of Rokitansky; this address was followed by a
second on June 18, 1850. The following October he received the long-awaited
appointment as a Privatdozent in midwifery, but the routine governmental decree
stipulated that he could teach obstetrics on a mannequin, a rather humiliating
condition. Faced with financial difficulties in supporting his family, and
perhaps discouraged, Semmelweis in 1850 abruptly left the Austrian capital,
returning to Pest without notifying even his closest friends. Such a hasty
decision jeopardized forever his chances to overcome the Viennese sceptics
gradually with the dedicated help of Rokitansky, Skoda, Hebra, and other
colleagues.
In Hungary, Semmelweis found a backward and depressed political and scientific
athmosphere following the crushing defeat of the liberals in the revolution of
1848. Despite the unfavorable circumstances, he managed to receive an honorary
appointment and took charge of the maternity ward of Pest’s St.-Rochus
Hospital in May 1851, remaining there until 1857. When he came to this hospital
an epidemic of puerperal fever had broken out in the birth clinic. Semmelwis, at
his own request, took charge of the department, where his profylactic measures
soon reduced mortality to a mere 0.85 percent. At his time, mortality in Prague
and Vienna was still between 10 and 15 percent.
Semmelweis married, had five children, and built a large private practice. His
ideas were soon accepted in Hungary, and in a letter to all local authorities
the government ordered that his profylactic methods were to be introduced. In
1857 he turned down an invitation to the chair of obstetrics in Zurich. Vienna
was still hostile towards him, and the editor of the Wiener medizinische
Wochenzeitschrift wrote that it was time to stop the nonsense of handwashing
with chloride.
Following the death of the incumbent, Semmelweis was appointed by the Austrian
Ministry of Education to the chair of theoretical and practical midwifery at the
University of Pest in July 1855, although he had been only the second choice of
the local medical faculty. He subsequently devoted his efforts to improving the
appalling conditions of the university’s lying-in hospital, a difficult task
in the face of severe economic restrictions. In 1855 Semmelweis instituted his
chlorine hand washings in the clinic, and he gradually achieved good results
despite initial carelessness by the hospital staff. His lectures, delivered in
Hungarian by decree of the Austrian authorities, attracted large audiences.
Semmelweis also became active in university affairs, serving on committees
dealing with medical education, clinical services, and library organizations.
In 1861 Semmelweis finally published his momentous discovery in book form Die Ätiologie,
der Begriff und die Prophylaxis des Kindbettfiebers. The work was written in
German and discussed, at length, the historical cicumstances surrounding his
discovery of the cause and prevention of puerperal fever. A number of
unfavorable foreign reviews of the book prompted Semmelweis to lash out against
his critics in series of open letters written in 1861-1862, which did little to
advance his ideas.
At a conference of German physicians and natural scientists, most of the
speakers rejected his doctrine. One of them was Rudolf Virchow.
In 1861 Semmelweis ’increasing bitterness and frustration at the lack of
acceptance of his method finally broke his hitherto indomitable spirit. He
became alternately apathetic and pathologically enraged about his mission as a
saviour of mothers. In July 1865 Semmelweis suffered what appeared to be a form
of mental illness; and after a journey to Vienna imposed by friends and
relatives, he was committed to an asylum, the Niederösterreichische
Landesirrenanstalt in Wien Döbling. He died there only two weeks later.
Traditionally, he is said to have died the victim of a generalized sepsis
ironically similar to that of puerperal fever, which had ensued from a
surgically infected finger. According to an article in Journal of Medical
Biography, by H. O. Lancaster, however, this is not true:
“Much biographical material has been written on Semmelweis, yet the true story of his death on 13 August 1865 was not confirmed until 1979, by S. B. Nuland. After some years of mental deterioration, Semmelweis was committed to a private asylum in Vienna. There he became violent and was beaten by asylum personnel; from the injuries received he died within a forthnight. Thus some dramatic theories have been destroyed, including that he was injured and infected at an autopsy, which if true would have been a wonderful case of Greek irony.”
Semmelweis’ achievement must be considered against the medical milieu of his
time. The ontological concept of disease insisted on specific disease entities
that could be distinctly correlated both clinically and pathologically.
Puerperal fever, however, exhibited multiple and varying anatomical
localizations and a baffling symptomatology closely related to the evolution of
generalized sepsis. The apparent connection between this fever and erysipelas
further clouded the issue. Moreover, the idea of a specific contagion causing
the disease was not borne out by the clinical experience. In the face of such
theoretical uncertainties and the profusion of causes attributable to the
disease, Semmelweis displayed a brilliant methodology borrowed from his teachers
at the Second Vienna Medical School.
The Medical University of Budapest where he worked is named after him.
-
It is not chance that accounts for a single practitioner having 16 fatal cases
in a single month.
Oliver Wendell Holmes
When I look back upon the past, I can only dispel the sadness which falls upon me by gazing into that happy future when the infection will be banished . . . The conviction that such a time must inevitably sooner or later arrive will cheer my dying hour.
Semmelweis, Aetiology, Foreword.
We thank Frederick Sweet for correcting errors on the original entry. Frederick Sweet is Professor, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri.
Works by Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis:
- Fall von sackartiger Ausbuchtung des schwangeren Gebärmutterhalses.
Wiener medizinische Wochenschrift, 1857.
- A gyermekagyi láz koroktana (“The Atiology of Childbed
Fevers”), Orvosi hétilap, 1858; no. 1: 1-5; no. 2: 17-21; no. 5, 65-69;
no. 6: 81-84; no. 21: 321-326; no. 22: 337-342; no. 23: 353-359.
Semmelweis’ first first publications on his ideas.
- Die Aetiologie, der Begriff und die Prophylaxis des Kindbettfiebers. Pest-Wien-Leipzig,
1861.
Reprinted with a new introduction by A. F. Guttmacher. New York-London, 1966.
Translated into English by F. R. Murphy as The Etiology, the Concept and Prophylaxis of Childbed Fever, in Medical Classics, 1941; 5: 350-773.
- Zwei offene Briefe an Dr. Ed. Casp. Jac. von Siebold und an Dr. F. W.
Scanzoni, Professoren der Geburtshilde.< Vienna, 1861.
Rferring to Eduard Kaspar Jakob von Siebold (1801-1866) and Friedrich Wilhelm Scanzoni von Lichtenfels (1821-1891).
- Zwei offene Briefe an Dr. J. Späth, Professor der Geburtshilfe an der
k. k. Josephs-Akademie in Wien und an Hofrath Dr. F. W. Scanzoni, Professor
der Geburtshilfe zu Würzburg.
Vienna, 1861. Referring to Joseph Späth (1823-1896).
- On the Origin and Prevention of Puerperal Fever.
Medical Times and Gazette, London, 1862; 1: 601-602.
- Gesammelte Werke.
Jena, Gustav Fischer, 1905. Edited and partially translated from the Hungarian by T. Von Györi. Also contains papers and articles on Semmelweis by Hebra and Skoda.
In 1903 the Hungarian Society for the Publication of Medical Works collected and published Semmelweis’ works in Hungarian while the Hungarian Academy simultaneously arranged for an edition of the collected writings in German:
Semmelweis writings are listed in:
- Medical Classics, 1941; 5: 340-341.
- Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 1946; 20: 653-707.
On Semmelweis and his work:
- J. Magyary-Kossa:
Ungarische Medizinische Erinnerungen. Budapest, 1935, pp. 284-194.
- Viktor Robinson:
Pathfinders in Medicine.
1st edition, 1912, pp. 249-273; 2nd edition, 1929, pp. 623-647.
Medical Review of Reviews, 1912, 18: 232-246.
- H. O. Lancaster (Sydney, Australia):
Semmelweis: a rereading of Die Aetiologie . . .
Part I: Puerperal sepsis before 1845; Die Aetiologie.
Journal of Medical Biography, London, February 1994; volume 2, No 1, pp 12-21.
Part II: Medical historians and Semmelweis.
Journal of Medical Biography, London, May 1994; volume 2, No. 2, pp 84-88.
- S. B. Nuland:
The enigma of Semmelweis – an interpretation.
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, Oxford, 1979; 34: 255-272.
- Alfred Hegar:
Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis. Sein Leben und Seine Lehre, Zugleich ein Beitrag zur Lehre der fieberhaften Wundkrankheiten.
Freiburg-Tübingen, 1882. 18: Freiburg im Breisgau.
- Fritz Schürer von Waldheim:
Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis, sein Leben und Wirken.
Wien.Leipzig, 1905.
- William J. Sinclair:
Semmelweis, His Life and Doctrines. Manchester, 1909.
- György Gortvay, Imre Zoltán:
Semmelweis – His Life and Work.
Originally published in Hungarian in 1965. Translated by E. Róna. Budapest, 1968.
- E. Podach:
Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis. Berlin-Leipzig, 1947.
- Henry E. Sigerist, in:
The Great Doctors.
Translated by Eden and Cedar Paul. Baltimore, 1933; chapter 41: 338-343.
- Regöy-Mérei:
The Pathological Reconstruction of Semmelweis’ Disease on the Basis of the Catamnestic Analysis of Paleopathological Examination.
In: Orvostörteneti közlemények, 1970; no. 55-56: 65-92.
- Benedek:
The Illness and Death of Semmelweis. In: Orvostörteneti közlemények, 1970; no. 55-56: 103-113.
- L. Madai:
Semmelweis and Statistical Science. In: Orvostörteneti közlemények, 1970; no. 55-56: 157-174.
- Erna Lesky:
Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis und die Wiener medizinische Schule.
Sitzungsberichte der phil.-hist. Klasse der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften,
Vienna, 1964; volume 245, 3. Abhandlung: 1-93.
Summarized in:
Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis, Legende und Historie.
Deutsche medizinische Wochenschrift, Stuttgart, 1972; 97: 627-632.
- S. Fekete:
Die Geburtsfilhe zur Zeit Semmelweis.
Clio Medica, Amsterdam, 1970; 5: 35-44.
Semmelweis' method
Disinfection of the hands of the obstetrician or midwife with chloride or lime,
as well as clean bedsheaths for the patient, in order to prevent puerperal
fever. The hand washing was introduced by Semmelweis in 1847.
The first to advance as a definite hypothesis the contagious nature of puerperal
fever, thus preceding Holmes and Semmelweis by half a century, was Alexander
Gordon (1752-1799) of Aberdeen, Scotland. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894) of
Cambridge, Massachusett, was the first to establish the contagious nature of
puerperal fever. His essay on the subject took a strong line against opinions
thus prevailing, stirring up violent opposition among the obstetricians of
Phildelphia.
Bibliography:
- Hippocrates:
Epidemics 1, case 4. In: [Works] with an English translation by W. H. Jones. London, W. Heinemann, 1923, 1: 193-195.
- John Burton (1697-1771):
An essay towards a complete new system of midwifery, theoretical and practical.
London, J. Hodges, 1751.
Burton was the first to suggest that puerperal fever is contagious, and the first to give a detailed discussion of Caesarean section.
- John Leake (1729-1792):
Practical Observations on the Child-bed Fever: also on the Nature and Treatment of Uterine Hćmorrhages, Convulsions, and Such Other Acute Diseases, as are Most Fatal to Women During the State of Pregnancy.
London: Printed for J. Walters, . . . . [et al.], [1772]. Many later editions.
Reprinted, London, Sydenham Society, 1949.
John Leake, physician to the Westminster Lying-in Hospital, insisted on the contagious nature of puerperal fever.
- Charles Powell White (1728-1813):
A Treatise on the Management of Pregnant and Lying-in women.
London, E. & C. Dilly, 1773.
White was the first to state clearly in a text on midwifery the necessity of absolute cleanliness in the lying-in chamber, the isolation of infected patients, and adequate ventilation. He instituted the principle of uterine drainage, placing his patients in a sitting position shortly after delivery using a special bed and chair. In this he preceded Fowler. White was also the first after Hippocrates to make any substantial contributions towards the solution of the aetiology and management of puerperal fever.
- A. Gordon:
A treatise on the epidemic puerperal fever of Aberdeen.
London, G. G. & J. Robinson, 1795.
- O. Wendell Holmes:
The contagiousness of puerperal fever.
New England Quarterly Journal of Medicine and Surgery, April 1843, 1: 503-530.
Reprinted in Medical Classics, 1936, 1: 211-243.
- Puerperal fever, as a private pestilence. Boston, Ticknor &
Fields, 1855.
Reprinted in Medical Classics, 1936, 1: 245-268.
Because his first paper had been published in a short-lived journal with very small circulation, Holmes enlarged his famous essay on the contagiousness of puerperal fever, and in the reiteration mentioned the steps already taken by Semmelweis.
- Ferdinand von Hebra:
Höchst wichtige Erfahrungen über die Aetiologie der in Gebäranstalten epidemischen Puerperalfieber.
Zeitschrift der kaiserlich-königlichen Gesellschaft der Ärzte zu Wien, 1847, 4, pt. 2: 242-244.
Zeitschrift der kaiserlich-königlichen Gesellschaft der Ärzte zu Wien, 1849, 5: 64-65.
Ferdinand von Hebra wrote these two articles for Semmelweis.
- I. P. Semmelweis:
Die Aetiologie, der Begriff und die Prophylaxis des Kindbettfiebers.
Pest-Wien-Leipzig, 1861.
Reprinted with a new introduction by A. F. Guttmacher. New York-London, 1966. Translated into English by F. R. Murphy as The Etiology, the Concept and Prophylaxis of Childbed Fever, in Medical Classics, 1941; 5: 350-773.
Semmelweis had no literary style and his book is difficult reading; it had an overwhelming mass of badly-presented statistics. Sir W. J. Sinclair, his biographer, said of him that "if he could have written like Oliver Wendell Holmes, his "Aetiology" would have conquered Europe in 12 months".
- Louis Pasteur (1822-1895):
Septicémie puerpérale.
Bulletin de l'Académie de médecine, Paris, 1879, 2. série, 8: 505-508.
Description of the streptococcus of puerperal sepsis.
- Albert Sigmund Gustav Döderlein (1860-1941):
Das Scheidensekret und seine Bedeutung für das Puerperalfieber.
Leipzig, O. Durr, 1892. A classic description of the vaginal secretion in relation to puerperal fever. Includes the first description of ”Döderlein’s bacillus”.
- Josef von Halban (1870-1937):
Die pathologische Anatomie des Puerperalprozesses.
Wien, Leipzig, W. Braumüller, 1919.
- Eugen Anselm:
Unsere Erfahrungen mit Prontosil bei Puerperalfieber.
Deutsche medizinische Wochenschrift, 1935, 61: 264 (only).
First report of the use of a microbial agent in the treatment of obstetric infections.
Eugen Anselm was a member of the SS and an active participant in the NAZI politics of "racial cleaning".
source: http://www.whonamedit.com/synd.cfm/346.html 15mar2005
The Semmelweis' reflex
Mob behavior found among primates and larval hominids on undeveloped planets,
in which a discovery of important scientific fact is punished rather than
rewarded. Named after Dr. Ignaz Semmelweis, who discovered the cause of
puerperal fever, a now-obsolete disease which, in Semmelweis's primitive era,
killed a vast number of women in childbirth every year. Semmelweis was fired
from his hospital, expelled from his medical society, denounced and ridiculed
widely, reduced to abject poverty and finally was beaten to death in a madhouse.
Timothy Leary in The Game of Life.
source: http://www.whonamedit.com/synd.cfm/347.html 15mar2005
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