John Wishart (surgeon)
John Wishart | |
---|---|
Born | John Wishart May 27, 1850 Guelph/Eramosa, Ontario; Canada |
Died | November 6, 1926 | (aged 76)
Alma mater | University of Toronto |
Medical career | |
Institutions | University of Western Ontario St Joseph's Hospital London Ontario |
John Wishart (May 27, 1850 – November 6, 1926) was a Canadian surgeon and pioneer medical educator.[1] Wishart was the first professor of surgery at the University of Western Ontario. He was a pioneer surgical educator in Canada prior to the Flexner Report. Some of his lectures are preserved as student notes by the library at the University of Western Ontario. His resignation after 27 years as Professor of Clinical Surgery may have been due to Flexner's negative comments about the school. Wishart was a founding fellow of the American College of Surgeons.[2]
Wishart was educated at the University of Toronto at the same time as William Osler. As a young surgeon in 1874, he assisted Abraham Groves in one of the first operations to use modern aseptic technique.[3] In 1886, he performed an appendectomy becoming an early practitioner of that surgery.[4] Wishart published early articles regarding several surgical procedures, including nephrectomy[5] and strangulated inguinal hernia[6]
After leaving the University of Western Ontario, he became the founding surgeon-in-chief at the newly built St Joseph's Hospital in London, Ontario. Despite being Presbyterian, he had an excellent relationship with the Catholic Sisters of St. Joseph who ran the hospital.[7]
References
- ^ Claydon, Emily (2012). "The Life of John Wishart (1850–1926): Study of an Academic Surgical Career Prior to the Flexner Report". World Journal of Surgery. 36 (3): 684–8. doi:10.1007/s00268-011-1407-x. PMC 3279636. PMID 22270978.
- ^ "1913 Yearbook American College of Surgeons". Retrieved 2013-07-12.
- ^ Groves, Abraham (1874). "A case of ovariotomy". Canada Lancet: 345–7.
- ^ Obituary: Wishart J (1926) New York Times. November 5.
- ^ Wishart, John (1890). "Abdominal nephrectomy for hydro-nephrosis, with a report of two operations" (PDF). Montreal Medical Journal: 1–10.
- ^ Wishart, John (1895). "The treatment of strangulated hernia". Canada Lancet: 197–202.
- ^ Hennessey G (Sister). Chronicles of the Sisters of St. Joseph of the Diocese of London, Ontario, 1868–1932. Sisters of St. Joseph’s of London Archives, St. Josephs Hospital, London