A bloody good story | |
An antipodean’s history of haematology. Robert E Sage.Norwood, SA: Peacock Publications, 2004 (528 pp) ISBN 1 876087 96 X. |
Thomas
Carlyle,
19th century Scottish historian and philosopher, once
observed that “History is the essence
of innumerable biographies.” And this is the style of An antipodean’s
history of haematology by retired Australian haematologist, R Ed Sage.
The book falls into two sections. In the first six chapters, Sage attempts to cover the history of haematology from antiquity to the 1960s, but sadly, clarity is drowned in the overwhelming detail. It is the following 17 chapters that make the book “a bloody good story”. Sage traces the history of antipodean haematology according to Carlyle’s tenet; he explores the professional lives of 99 Australasian haematologists. Indeed, this is the essence of the book’s uniqueness — the alignment of the professional lives of these haematologists with the growth of Australasian haematology, the foundation and growth of the Haematology Society of Australia (1961) and the Australasian Society of Blood Transfusion (1964), and events beyond. Sage presents insights into personalities and politics, including the revelations of the intransigence between transfusionists in Melbourne and Sydney over such monumental matters as the transfusion bottle! There were also the philosophical differences over what a haematologist is — a rancorous debate, which reached its peak in the 1970s, and embroiled the Austral(as)ian Colleges of Physicians and Pathologists, along with academics and mainstream haematologists. The bad blood was to ooze for years. Other stories include: the reasons for Melbourne’s
erstwhile position as the power house of Australian haematology, a supremacy
sustained by attracting the cream of Sage unearths some interesting facts. William Osler is called an English
physician (he was Canadian); John Hunter is claimed to have been publishing
and describing syndromes in 1817 (he died in 1793); the University of St
Louis is said to be located in Mississippi (St Louis University is in
Missouri); and Wollongong Hospital is said to be located in Sydney (the
denizens of Wollongong, some 100 km south of Sydney, would be surprised to
learn this). Nonetheless, the book is a significant history, adorned by innumerable mug
shots of people in their prime or decline, and precious photos of local
historical events. At its price, it is a bargain and should be on the shelves
of all Australasian haematologists and haematology departments. I thoroughly
recommend it. Martin B Van Der Weyden
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