Could You Survive Victorian Surgery?

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  • Опубліковано 8 гру 2022
  • 'Could You Survive Victorian Surgery?'
    In this video, History Hit's Alice Loxton dives deep into London’s grisly past. She goes under the knife and takes a forensic look at the horrors of Victorian medicine. And where better to do so than the Old Operating Theatre Museum and Herb Garret - one of London’s hidden gems.
    The museum is housed in the only remaining part of what was once London’s most important centre of medicine, the old site of St Thomas’ Hospital. The tower of St Thomas’ Church, is one of the only surviving part of the original structure. And at the top of its very windy staircase is the original apothecary and herb garret for Old St Thomas’s Hospital.
    In 1822, part of the herb garret was converted into a purpose-built operating theatre. Instead of operations taking place in the women’s ward in front of all the other patients, they would be performed here by leading experts, where medical students could watch and learn.
    As Alice discovers, going under the knife for a Victorian amputation was a risky business. There were no anaesthetics and very little understanding of germs or infection. But despite the gruesome nature of these procedures, the female patients who made it onto the operating table here would've considered themselves lucky. Most were poor, and were prepared to put up with the distress of a live audience in order to receive treatment from the best surgeons in London. In fact, the trial and error of these operations led to major breakthroughs in surgical practice, paving the way for the huge advances in medicine in the 20th century.
    So if you are someone who is fascinated by the gory, the gruesome and the downright bizarre … this is just what the doctor ordered. Stick around to the end to see if I survive the operating table, and don’t forget to subscribe and hit that notification bell.
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    #historyhit #aliceloxton #victorianera

КОМЕНТАРІ • 304

  • @fosterfuchs
    @fosterfuchs Рік тому +626

    One of the best things about living in today's world: The existence and use of anesthesia.

  • @moirataylor6417
    @moirataylor6417 Рік тому +447

    The texture on the bottles wasn't just to aid grip but to help prevent accidental poisoning. Grabbing a bottle in a dark or dimly lit room could lead to confusion. Hence if one grabs a textured bottle in the middle of the night without lighting a candle or lamp, the person knows immediately that they are holding a 'poisonous' substance.

  • @thoughtful_criticiser
    @thoughtful_criticiser Рік тому +216

    40 years ago we had a little old lady who was having her leg amputated using an epidural. She was conscious for the whole operation. She couldn't see what was happening due to a screen. As the epidural was being installed, there was some work happening outside, hammering and sawing. They stopped for the surgery and we told her it would be quiet. All the flesh had been cut back and the surgeon had just started to cut the bone. All of a sudden she shouted to stop, which he did. I asked her what was wrong. She said to go and tell the workmen to be quiet and stop sawing. It's the only time I saw operating theatre staff lose it. The surgeon dropped his saw and ran out side followed by others . You could hear them laughing and I was stuck trying not to. She stopped the surgeon twice more until someone brought a loud radio in. I've never laughed so much.

  • @TenorCantusFirmus
    @TenorCantusFirmus Рік тому +63

    I have a strange fascination with the Victorian Era - It was such an horrible time to live for 99.9% of people of the Age, while at the same time starting to have some of nowadays' techs, it makes for a fascinating historical object of study. But I would never, ever take a Time Machine to get back at those times.

  • @anthonystevens8683
    @anthonystevens8683 Рік тому +64

    It's a very grim reminder as to how things were back in the day but it's also an important reminder that people learned how to perform operations for the larger community. Very well presented Alice. I would have had nightmares for ages had I been in your position. Many thanks for sharing. Oh and please don't break a leg, you are a brilliant presenter.

  • @BrianaCunningham
    @BrianaCunningham Рік тому +16

    The patient POV was excellent haha

  • @cannae216

    Thank God for anesthetic. Easily the most powerful amputation scene is from the movie Glory when the main character listens to a fellow wounded soldier getting his limb amputated without anesthetic. It's truly horrifying--the actor should've gotten an Oscar for that one scene.

  • @edenrizzo7621
    @edenrizzo7621 Рік тому +17

    Imagine 500 years in the future people going to our hospitals like they are a museum. Saying “only living 70-90 years? Looking at this stuff it’s no wonder why”

  • @kevanhubbard9673
    @kevanhubbard9673 Рік тому +39

    Due to Victoria's long life the Victorian Era was pretty long and your chance of survival at the beginning of the era would be significantly worse than at the end.

  • @ryanhobbs3362
    @ryanhobbs3362 Рік тому +98

    I see Alice, I watch. She is always very entertaining and educational. Well done.

  • @R3tr0humppa
    @R3tr0humppa Рік тому +15

    "Look only display" - Alice rifles through ALL the herbs. 😂

  • @andrewdowns3403
    @andrewdowns3403 Рік тому +24

    Well done Alice , you got over your amputation quite well , and recovered well enough to give us more of your talks

  • @joshbrailsford
    @joshbrailsford Рік тому +20

    Awesome video. I voted for this topic in the poll last week and it didn't disappoint. This is the sort of thing that makes you thankful to be living in the 21st century!

  • @waynehiggins16
    @waynehiggins16 Рік тому +21

    I saw Alice and a male friend in the wetherspoons at victoria station at the end of October. I was watching some of her mini docs on the coach journey back from Leicester. Great historian and a really engaging way of explaining history.

  • @paulbennett4415

    I visited the Old Operating Theatre many years ago on my way to St. Thomas' Hospital (to have dental surgery). As I had about two hours before my appointment, I just had to see inside. It seems that I had arrived just as a talk was being delivered and the speaker was most informative (there were a few other curious souls in there as well). He went on to say that there was no ventilation, with the only illumination coming from a skylight and a primitive gas light and no running water or plumbing. The overcrowding would have been unbelievable, with the medical students packed in and standing like vertical sardines; the whole place must have been unpleasantly stuffy. If the surgeon and his assistants became too engrossed in their work, then the impudent students would shout out "Heads, heads!" as they could not see what was happening. I distinctly remember the speaker mentioning the part about the surgeon kicking the box of sand or sawdust under the table in order to catch the rivulets of blood. This was to prevent those involved from slipping and sliding. How humiliating it must have been for the patient/victim who must have been absolutely desperate, terrified and poverty-stricken. Hands and instruments were not washed or sterilised and the surgeon's coat (which he only wore while operating) would have been stiff with pus and blood - not exactly encouraging for the subject lying there. To this day, a surgical operating room is still referred to as an operating theatre as a result of the original design (but without the dozens of gawping students). I hope the above is of interest and thank you Alice for reviving this historical memory for me.

  • @54mgtf22
    @54mgtf22 Рік тому +14

    Miss Alice Loxton is a gem who brings history to life.

  • @purpledragonstudios5174
    @purpledragonstudios5174 Рік тому +17

    fun fact : alot of our modern medicine uses alot of the herbs shown here! while you arent familiar to the ingrediants, some of the ingrediants are of the scientific names! alot are also chemically based but those were either herbal historically and then branching off from herbs to chemicals! even alot of poisonous plants being used in small ammounts! bella donna was used for insomnia. hay fever. bronchial spasms in asthma. and many other things in VERY small doses! medicine has come far but we always have the very beginning to be thankful for!

  • @dewilew2137
    @dewilew2137 Рік тому +24

    So basically everyone who survived an operation in those days had to live with severe iatrogenic PTSD for the rest of their lives? Nah, just let me die, for real. 😔😔

  • @HismerciesareneweveryAM
    @HismerciesareneweveryAM Рік тому +3

    I was cringing the whole time because I had double jaw surgery a few years ago (basically sawing both jaws and realigning them), and I could (and would) NEVER have agreed to such a thing over a century ago! Sawing your leg is one thing, but your FACE without anesthesia is quite another... Those POOR people 😢

  • @LaHayeSaint

    Alice -- I don't know who was more frightened seeing you on the block ready for amputation. It made my blood run cold as your surgeon sawed with long strokes and you just had to take the pain. Those long knives almost made me faint. They were like bayonets.