Isaac Baker Brown

{{short description|English gynaecologist and obstetric surgeon}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2021}}

{{Use British English|date=September 2016}}

File:Isaac Baker Brown.jpg

Isaac Baker Brown (1812 – 3 February 1873){{Cite journal |date=1873-02-08 |title=Isaac Baker Brown |url=https://www.bmj.com/content/1/632/158.2 |journal=Br Med J |language=en |volume=1 |issue=632 |pages=158–159 |doi=10.1136/bmj.1.632.158-a |issn=0007-1447|url-access=subscription }} was a prominent{{citation|last1=Ryan|first1=Christopher|last2=Jethá|first2=Cacilda|title=Sex at Dawn|year=2010|publisher=Harper|author-link1=Christopher Ryan (author)|location=New York|page=[https://archive.org/details/sexatdawnprehist0000ryan/page/ ??]|isbn=978-0-06-170780-3}}{{page needed|date=February 2021}} 19th-century English gynaecologist and obstetrical surgeon. He had a reputation as a specialist in the diseases of women and advocated certain surgical procedures, including clitoridectomies, as cures for epilepsy and hysteria. In 1867, his career ended when he was accused of performing these procedures without consent of the patients. He was subsequently expelled from the Obstetrical Society of London.

Biography

=Early life=

Baker Brown was born in 1811 in Colne Engaine, Essex.Roy His parents were farmer Isaac Baker Brown, and Catherine (née Boyer), the daughter of a schoolmaster. He went to school in Halstead, Essex, and became an apprentice to a surgeon called Gibson. He studied at Guy's Hospital, London and specialised in midwifery and diseases of women. He married Anne Rusher Barron on 18 June 1833, in Colchester, Essex. Following Anne's death he married his second wife, Catherine Read, on 21 May 1863.

=Career=

Baker Brown opened a medical practice in Connaught Square, London in 1834 and soon became known as a specialist in gynaecology. In 1845, he was one of the founders of St Mary's Hospital, London.Darby, p. 145 He was elected a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1848.Sheehan, p. 326 In 1858 he founded the London Surgical Home for Women and worked on advancing surgical procedures. He began to perform ovariotomies on women, including his own sister. In 1864, he was the first person to describe a surgical treatment for stress incontinence involving a suprapubic cystostomy procedure.O'Dowd & Philipp, p. 493 He was elected president of the Medical Society of London in 1865. In 1866, Baker Brown described the use of clitoridectomy as a cure for several conditions, including epilepsy, catalepsy and mania, which he attributed to masturbation.Kent, p. 189Fennell, p. 66 In On the Curability of Certain Forms of Insanity, Epilepsy, Catalepsy, and Hysteria in Females, he gave a 70 per cent success rate using this treatment.

During 1866, Baker Brown began to receive negative feedback from within the medical profession from doctors who opposed the use of clitoridectomies, and questioned the validity of Baker Brown's claims of success. An article appeared in The Times in December, which was favourable towards Baker Brown's work but suggested that Baker Brown had treated women of unsound mind.Fennell, p. 66–69 The London Surgical Home was not licensed for this under the Lunacy Act and when the Lunacy Commission began to ask questions, Baker Brown denied it and tried to distance himself from the article.Fennell, p. 69 He was also accused of performing clitoridectomies without the consent or knowledge of his patients or their families. In 1867 he was expelled from the Obstetrical Society of London for carrying out the operations without consent.Vergnani

Baker Brown's career did not recover and he died on 3 February 1873 in London, following a year spent as an invalid.

Bibliography

  • 1854: On some Diseases of Women Admitting of Surgical Treatment
  • 1866: On the Curability of Certain Forms of Insanity, Epilepsy, Catalepsy, and Hysteria in Females

Footnotes

{{reflist|30em}}

References

  • {{cite book

| last = Darby

| first = Robert J. L.

| title = A surgical temptation: the demonization of the foreskin and the rise of circumcision in Britain

| publisher = University of Chicago Press

| year = 2005

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=sD6CALS2NtQC

| isbn =0-226-13645-0 }}

  • {{cite book

| last = Fennell

| first = Phil

| title = Treatment without consent: law, psychiatry and the treatment of mentally disordered people since 1845

| publisher = Routledge

| year = 1999

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=XqlBoZ_Vm7UC

| isbn =0-415-07787-7 }}

  • {{cite book

| last = Kent

| first = Susan Kingsley

| title = Gender and power in Britain, 1640–1990

| publisher = Routledge

| year = 1999

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=0-1fIjmMaQoC

| isbn =0-415-14742-5 }}

  • {{cite book

| last1 = O'Dowd

| first1 = Michael J.

| last2 = Philipp

| first2 = Elliot Elias

| title = The history of obstetrics and gynaecology

| publisher = Informa Health Care

| year = 2000

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=tETjBc7eZ7kC

| isbn = 1-85070-040-0}}

  • {{Cite news

| last = Roy

| first = Judith M.

| title = Brown, Isaac Baker (1811–1873)

| newspaper = Oxford Dictionary of National Biography

| year = 2004

| url = http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/50268

| access-date =4 October 2009

}}

  • {{cite book

| last = Sheehan

| first = Elizabeth A.

| title = The gender/sexuality reader: culture, history, political economy

| chapter=Victorian Clitoridectomy

| editor1-last=Lancaster

| editor1-first=Roger N.

| editor2-last=Di Leonardo

| editor2-first=Micaela

| publisher = Routledge

| year = 1997

| pages = 325–334

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=VWd7B_KuD5YC

| chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=VWd7B_KuD5YC&pg=PA325

| isbn =0-415-91005-6}}

  • {{Cite news

| last = Vergnani

| first = Linda

| title = 'Uterine fury' - now sold in chemists

| newspaper = Times Higher Education

| date = 9 May 2003

| url = https://www.timeshighereducation.com/features/uterine-fury-now-sold-in-chemists/176539.article?storyCode=176539§ioncode=26

| access-date =7 October 2009

}}

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Category:1812 births

Category:1873 deaths

Category:19th-century English medical doctors

Category:English gynaecologists

Category:English surgeons

Category:Medical controversies in the United Kingdom

Category:People from Braintree District