Discovery
of
Antiseptics
of
Antiseptics
Joseph Lister was born Upton, Essex, in England in 1827.
He was educated at the universities of London and Edinburgh, 1852. In 1856 he
becomes a surgeon in the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary (hospital). In 1861 he was
appointed surgeon of the Glasgow Royal Infirmary in a new surgery unit designed
to reduce gangrene and other infections. At that time, it was more dangerous to
go to hospitals for surgery. One famous doctor said that it was very dangerous
to go to hospitals for surgery than to be a soldier in a war. This was because
many died from infection. Despite his efforts to keep surgical instruments and
rooms clean the mortality rate remained close to 50 percent.
In 1865 he come upon the germ theory of the French
bacteriologist Louis Pasteur, whose experiments revealed that fermentation and
putrefaction were caused by micro organisms brought in contact with organic
material. Believing infection to be caused by airborne dust particles, Lister
sprayed the air with carbolic acid, a strong disinfectant and a chemical that
was then being used to treat foul – smelling sewers. He also told his surgeons
to use it to wash their hands and equipment before surgery. In 1867, Lister
reduced surgical mortality to nearly 12 percent by 1869. Lister wrote about his
methods of using disinfectants in an important medical journal. Many people
didn’t believe him. He had to spend many years talking to people and writing
about his ideas. At last they agreed with him.
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