De ontwikkeling van het klinisch-diagnostisch laboratorium in Nederland tot omstreeks 1925

The development of the clinical-diagnostic laboratory in the Netherlands until ca 1925 This article surveys the rise of the clinical laboratory in The Netherlands. By way of an introduction an overview is given ofthe development of medical diagnostics, especially the increase in diagnostic objects and the expansion of technical an chemical instrumentation. Both aspects considerably affected the rise of the clinical laboratory. More products which could be investigated without the presence of the patient, such as stomach contents, cerebro-spinal fluids and tissue samples, were obtained. The nec... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Lieburg, M.J. van
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2012
Schlagwörter: Geschiedenis / Clinical-diagnostic laboratory / The Netherlands
Sprache: Niederländisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27158805
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/251078

The development of the clinical-diagnostic laboratory in the Netherlands until ca 1925 This article surveys the rise of the clinical laboratory in The Netherlands. By way of an introduction an overview is given ofthe development of medical diagnostics, especially the increase in diagnostic objects and the expansion of technical an chemical instrumentation. Both aspects considerably affected the rise of the clinical laboratory. More products which could be investigated without the presence of the patient, such as stomach contents, cerebro-spinal fluids and tissue samples, were obtained. The necessity of making provision for the installation of physical and chemical instruments, such as the microscope, balances, colorimeter, centrifuge, etc., gave an increased impetus to the development of laboratory facilities. The development of this process in The Netherlands is explored firstly by searching through the Dutch medical literature for publications on the subject of medical laboratory work. Secondly, inventories were made for the laboratories which were mentioned in the medical yearbooks of The Netherlands. Most ofthe Dutch literature consisted of translations of English and German books on diagnostics, and it is only around 1900 that the first original publications can be located. The list of laboratories mentioned in the records makes it clear that the growing need for clinical laboratory procedures was first responded to by chemists and apothecaries, who recognised that clinical chemistry offered new money-making possibilities. It is difficult to judge the extent to which the general practitioner obtained facilities for clinical research within his home. Catalogues of medical instruments illustrate only what was obtainable. Financial and emotional (accentuation of the gap between technical an clinical types of work) barriers, and the restrictions imposed by education and by the possibilities for post-graduate education in the new techniques of clinical research all made a rift between the theory and praxis of ...