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2.
Arkh Patol ; 85(4): 80-83, 2023.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37530196

ABSTRACT

The article is devoted to the history of Professor D.D. Lokhov Department of Pathological Anatomy with a course of forensic medicine of the St. Petersburg State Pediatric Medical University of the Ministry of Health of Russia, founded by one of founders of the national pathological anatomy of childhood and adolescence, Professor D.D. Lokhov, whose name has been awarded to the Department since 2022. The updated advances of the Department in research, teaching and diagnostic activity are presented.


Subject(s)
Anniversaries and Special Events , Forensic Medicine , Humans , Child , History, 20th Century , Universities , Russia , Forensic Medicine/education , Forensic Medicine/history
4.
Sud Med Ekspert ; 66(2): 7-10, 2023.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37078669

ABSTRACT

Main directions of scientific and scientific-practical activity of the professor Mikhail Ivanovich Avdeev are described in the article. These include: a set of scientific tasks to justify the staff and organizational structure, organization and justification of the expert work content in the specialized military forensic service, including the training programs development for specialization and thematic improvement of forensic experts; determining the limits of competence for forensic experts in determining the violent death type; systematization of causes and death conditions; establishing structure of sudden death causes in young persons; assessment of the pathogenetic role of trauma and pathology in the development of basal subarachnoid hemorrhages; formulation of the conceptual base content for forensic medicine; justification of a scientifically based sequence of forensic medicine reproduction; creation of a scientific school of military forensic experts; preparation and publication of about 50 textbooks, manuals and, monographs on forensic medicine, including the fundamental work «Forensic Medicine Course¼, «Forensic Examination of Living People¼, «Forensic Corpse Examination¼.


Subject(s)
Faculty , Forensic Medicine , Humans , Forensic Medicine/history , Russia , Faculty/history , History, 20th Century
5.
Sud Med Ekspert ; 66(2): 11-14, 2023.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37078670

ABSTRACT

The authors' idea of the "scientific school" concept is presented. The evolution of the forensic school formation is shown, starting from the student years, through professional specialization and scientific analysis of forensic practice to independent thesis. The basic principles of training military forensic experts in the Military Medical Academy are demonstrated. A summary of 40 candidates and doctoral theses performed under the scientific supervision and with the scientific advice of Professor V.L. Popov is presented as well.


Subject(s)
Forensic Medicine , Humans , Forensic Medicine/history
7.
Clin Anat ; 34(7): 1068-1080, 2021 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33580903

ABSTRACT

William Hunter's writings, lectures and his collection of circa 1,400 pathological specimens at the University of Glasgow show that, within the scientific limitations of the 18th Century, he had a sound grasp of the significance of morbid anatomical appearances. Unlike John Hunter's collection at the Royal College of Surgeons of England, few of the Hunterian specimens at Glasgow have an accompanying case history. Within the Special Collections at the Glasgow University Library are a small number of post mortem reports, including four involving William Hunter's aristocratic patients. This article explores these patient cases, and also the only instance recorded by John Hunter of William working with him on a post mortem of an aristocrat, that of the Marquis of Rockingham, Prime Minister, who died in 1782. The study aims to better understand William Hunter's medical practice and his professional connections with other practitioners. The post mortem examinations were carried out by a surgeon/anatomist and observed by the patient's physician(s). For aristocratic post mortems, those attending were senior and well-established practitioners. The notes made were not particularly detailed. The reports show clearly that William Hunter's practice, in the 1760s at least, was not confined to midwifery.


Subject(s)
Anatomists/history , Dissection/history , Forensic Medicine/history , Obstetrics/history , Pathologists/history , History, 18th Century , Humans , Scotland
10.
Sud Med Ekspert ; 63(4): 62-64, 2020.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32686394

ABSTRACT

The purpose of the work is a brief historical and medical analysis of activities of the Department of Forensic Medicine of First Moscow Medical Institute during the Great Patriotic War. The authors presented the scientific, practical and teaching activities of the department during war years. The staff of the department, headed by prof. V.F. Chervakov conducted research relevant to the current historical period. The system of training medical personnel was modernized several times in accordance with the needs of the time. The department successfully coped with all tasks in a military situation and laid the foundations for further development of domestic forensic medicine.


Subject(s)
Forensic Medicine , Universities , Forensic Medicine/education , Forensic Medicine/history , Health Personnel , History, 20th Century , Humans , Moscow
11.
Acta Med Hist Adriat ; 18(1): 27-46, 2020 06 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32638598

ABSTRACT

The article is the first step of a research project aimed at investigating new perspectives and aspects of Morgagni's role and work. His activities as a medical examiner and forensic doctor are yet to be truly discovered. Manuscripts, written by Morgagni when he was a forensic expert for the Health Magistrate of Venice, currently preserved at the City Library in Forli (Italy), shed light on a new aspect of his cultural background. As a forensic doctor, he also helped push an increase in "social medicine" in Italy, when physicians began to collaborate with the administrative and political institutions in order to plan environmental and urban regulations to control air quality. While reading his reports, his contribution to the primordial medical Hygiene and Public Health emerges. Among his reports, the authors focused on the one concerning the Beatification of Gregorio Barbarigo, which clearly highlights his pathological approach, as well as his knowledge and application of embalming systems and mummiology. Moreover, this report could be considered as an issue in the history of paleopathology.


Subject(s)
Catholicism/history , Forensic Medicine/history , Pathology/history , Saints/history , Anatomy/history , Exhumation/history , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Italy , Mummies/history , Odorants
12.
J Am Acad Psychiatry Law ; 48(3): 384-392, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32404362

ABSTRACT

Sarah Jane Whiteling was accused of fatally poisoning her husband and two children in Philadelphia in 1888. The case prompted public outrage over the appearance that Ms. Whiteling's motive was to collect life insurance. It was evident, however, that she was disturbed, raising a question of culpability. Dr. Alice Bennett, the first female physician in charge of an asylum, provided the defense with expert testimony on the defendant's mental state. Dr. Bennett, who had little forensic but much clinical experience, proposed a physiological theory of insanity among women with reproduction-related derangements. At that time, cultural ideas about "female poisoners" colored popular and journalistic perceptions of Ms. Whiteling. Familicide was considered unconscionable because a mother's duty was to nurture and protect her family. When Ms. Whiteling was convicted and sentenced to death, Dr. Bennett undertook a campaign for commutation. Her unsuccessful efforts to reduce culpability were followed by Ms. Whiteling's hanging in 1889, the first execution of a woman in Philadelphia since colonial times. This article recounts the Whiteling case, Dr. Bennett's involvement in it, and how it relates to what is known about familicide. It is argued here that Dr. Bennett was a pioneer in applying medical expert testimony to effect individualized mitigation.


Subject(s)
Arsenic Poisoning/psychology , Family , Forensic Medicine/legislation & jurisprudence , Forensic Psychiatry/legislation & jurisprudence , Homicide/legislation & jurisprudence , Adult , Arsenic Poisoning/history , Capital Punishment/legislation & jurisprudence , Expert Testimony , Female , Forensic Medicine/history , Forensic Psychiatry/history , History, 19th Century , Homicide/history , Humans , Insanity Defense , Menstrual Cycle/psychology , Philadelphia , Reproductive Physiological Phenomena
13.
Med Sci Law ; 60(3): 216-222, 2020 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32299294

ABSTRACT

The autopsy rate in Japan is lower than that in other countries, and most death investigations have historically been conducted by police officers through external inspection. Although medicolegal autopsy was not performed during the samurai administration, the European death investigation system was adopted in the second half of the 19th century and judicial autopsy began in universities' forensic medicine departments. After World War II, the medical examiner system was introduced under US influence, but it was only adopted in certain areas. Further reforms were introduced in the 21st century-in 2012, two laws relating to death investigation were enacted: The Act on Promotion of Death Investigation (Promotion Act), which provided foundational principles and included measures for investigating the causes of death and identification of bodies, and the Act on the Investigation of Cause of Death and on Identification of Bodies Handled by the Police, which recommended a procedure for death investigation, including a new autopsy system.The Death Investigation Promotion Program was to meant to be decided by the government in 2014. However, the relevant Act expired after it ran out of time. Later, in 2019, the Basic Act for Promotion of Death Investigation, the successor to the Promotion Act, was passed. This Act is significant because it sets the basic foundational principle and imposes plans created by the government. However, it remains unclear how these measures can be implemented, so further discussion and financial investment are now required.


Subject(s)
Autopsy/standards , Forensic Medicine/legislation & jurisprudence , Forensic Medicine/organization & administration , Autopsy/history , Forensic Medicine/history , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Japan
14.
Acta Biomed ; 91(1): 118-121, 2020 03 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32191664

ABSTRACT

We focus our attention on the use of lithographed lecture notes written by professors, or more often by students, in the teaching of medicine and surgery courses, between the late 19th and early 20th centuries, a period in which, to better understand the phenomena underlying life and death, collaboration between medical professionals and natural science researchers was intense (1). In particular, we analyzed the lithographed lecture notes of Professor Paolo Pellacani at the University of Pavia for the course of legal medicine.


Subject(s)
Forensic Medicine/education , Forensic Medicine/history , Printing/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Italy , Universities
15.
Dynamis (Granada) ; 40(2): 421-455, 2020.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-218398

ABSTRACT

En el presente artículo, en primer lugar analizaremos los planteamientos de la ciencia médica chilena desde 1884 hasta 1916 en relación con las prácticas sexuales entre varones (la medicina legal, la teoría de la degeneración, la antropología criminal y la neuropatología). En segundo lugar caracterizaremos las conceptualizaciones empleadas por los médicos y abogados chilenos (descripciones que estaban hegemonizadas por la ciencia medica) en relación a la sexualidad entre varones: sodomía, inversión, pederastia y homosexualidad (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Homosexuality, Male/history , Sexual Behavior/history , Forensic Medicine/history , Psychiatry/history , Chile
16.
Dynamis (Granada) ; 40(1): 125-146, 2020. graf
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-200304

ABSTRACT

En el presente artículo estudiamos el viraje interpretativo impulsado por los principales exponentes de la Medicina Legal en Chile, ante la resolución conservadora de las controversias teóricas suscitadas por el llamado «principio de ejecución», relativo al delito de violación, desde su aparición en la primera sistematización penal y hasta las primeras dos décadas del siglo XX. Mediante un análisis de documentos normativos, obras bibliográficas y colecciones de revistas médico-jurídicas especializadas, constatamos cómo el proceso de significación de este «principio», lejos de quedar establecido en 1875, fue elaborado y modificado paulatinamente, gracias sobre todo a la labor desempeñada desde los principales impulsores de la Medicina Legal en el país. Asimismo, con el objetivo de conocer cuál fue la actuación del peritaje médico legal en la comprobación de los delitos de violación y de observar la implementación que el contenido teórico tuvo en la práctica, analizamos cien procesos judiciales por violación, incoados en los tribunales criminales de Santiago y Valparaíso entre 1890 y 1920. Interpretando los discursos médicos y penales considerados como creadores de una realidad concreta, ahondamos en los procesos de alianza e institucionalización médico-jurídica dentro de esta rama del conocimiento y consideramos su implementación material en las labores periciales encargadas por los tribunales criminales, para mostrar, así, cómo estas acciones coadyuvaron a reformular, reconstruir y consolidar una longeva desigualdad penal


No disponible


Subject(s)
Humans , History, 20th Century , Forensic Medicine/history , Criminal Law/history , Sex Offenses/legislation & jurisprudence , Legislation, Medical/history , Chile
17.
Sud Med Ekspert ; 62(6): 63-66, 2019.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31825336

ABSTRACT

The article illustrates the life of E.M. Evgen'ev-Tish, the well-known Physician, Forensic Medical Expert, Scientist, Head of the Department of Forensic Medicine (1954-1956) of the Kazan State Medical University. He is the author of the well-known monograph 'Determination of the Postmortem Interval in Forensic Medical Practice' published in 1963, which embraced all possible study methods on that subject.


Subject(s)
Forensic Medicine , Universities , Autopsy , Forensic Medicine/history , History, 20th Century
19.
Salud Colect ; 15: e1965, 2019 04 25.
Article in English, Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31664339

ABSTRACT

This article analyzes medical-legal associations between madness and criminality in department of Antioquia (Colombia) during the three first decades of 20th century. The analysis was oriented by two overlapping axes: discourses and practices. The ideas of four doctors, generated between 1917 and 1925, were examined in order to identify the theoretical debates that delimited and defined mental illnesses in legal cases. The use of qualified knowledge and their place as experts were analyzed in a judicial case, initiated in 1921, in which theoretical confrontations surfaced among the doctors that debated the possible insanity of the defendant.


Este artículo analiza algunas asociaciones médico-jurídicas entre locura y criminalidad en el departamento de Antioquia (Colombia), en las primeras tres décadas del siglo XX. El análisis se orientó por dos ejes imbricados: el de los discursos y el de las prácticas. Se examinaron las ideas de cuatro médicos, planteadas entre 1917 y 1925, para identificar los debates teóricos desde los cuales se delimitaban y definían las enfermedades mentales en casos judiciales. La puesta en escena del saber de los peritos y su lugar como expertos se analizaron en un caso judicial, que inició en 1921, y en cuyo desarrollo afloraron las confrontaciones teóricas entre los médicos que debatieron sobre la posible locura del acusado.


Subject(s)
Crime/history , Criminals/history , Forensic Medicine/history , Medicalization/history , Mental Disorders/history , Colombia , Crime/legislation & jurisprudence , Crime/psychology , Criminals/legislation & jurisprudence , Criminals/psychology , History, 20th Century , Humans , Malingering/diagnosis , Malingering/history , Malingering/psychology , Mental Disorders/diagnosis , Mental Disorders/psychology , Mental Disorders/therapy
20.
Asclepio ; 71(1): 0-0, ene.-jun. 2019. ilus
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-191050

ABSTRACT

La medicina legal en Chile estuvo estrechamente relacionada con la Morgue de Santiago, fundada aproximadamente en 1879. En ese lugar se desempeñó el médico de ciudad Eduardo Lira Errázuriz (1854-1911). Por medio de las autopsias que practicó, entre los años 1893 y 1905, es posible observar la profesionalización de la medicina legal que, en parte, respondió a la institucionalización y el reconocimiento del Estado como auxiliar de la aplicación de Justicia en el marco de un proceso de modernización y secularización de la sociedad. El ejercicio profesional del doctor Lira nos permite revisar sus prácticas en el contexto de una cultura católica, donde vida y muerte formaban parte de hechos trascendentes, pero que ahora se abren a categorías científicas, reconociendo en ellas los elementos fundamentales para la organización y el orden social, dentro de un Estado confesional


The legal medicine in Chile was closely related to the Morgue of Santiago, founded in approximately 1879. In this place served the city physician Eduardo Lira Errazuriz (1854-1911). By means of the autopsies that practical, between the years 1893 and 1905, it is possible to observe the professionalization of the legal medicine that, in part, responded to the institutionalization and the recognition of the State as the object of the application of justice within the framework of a process of modernization and secularization of society. The professional practice of Dr. Lira allows us to review their practices in the context of a catholic culture, where life and death were part of historic events, but which is now open to scientific categories, recognizing in them the fundamental elements for the organization and the social order, within a confessional State


Subject(s)
Humans , Forensic Medicine/history , Autopsy/history , Education, Medical/history , Morgue/history , Forensic Pathology/history , Chile , History, 19th Century , Cause of Death , Religion and Medicine , Social Control, Formal , Forensic Medicine/education , Suicide/history
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