{"id":9536,"date":"2016-06-14T11:00:00","date_gmt":"2016-06-14T15:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=9536"},"modified":"2024-10-21T11:13:29","modified_gmt":"2024-10-21T15:13:29","slug":"the-origins-and-evolution-of-the-mayo-clinic","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2016\/06\/14\/the-origins-and-evolution-of-the-mayo-clinic\/","title":{"rendered":"The Origins and Evolution of the Mayo Clinic"},"content":{"rendered":"
Bruce Fye will give the annual James H. Cassedy Memorial Lecture on June 22, 2016<\/a> at the National Library of Medicine on\u00a0“The Origins and Evolution of the Mayo Clinic from 1864 to 1939: A Minnesota Family Practice Becomes an International \u2018Medical Mecca.\u2019” Dr. Fye is an emeritus professor of medicine and the history of medicine at Mayo Clinic. He is also a past president of the American College of Cardiology, the American Association for the History of Medicine, and the American Osler Society.\u00a0 Dr. Fye has authored more than 100 historical or biographical articles and three books. <\/em>The Development of American Physiology: Scientific Medicine in the 19th Century was published in 1987. His 1996 book <\/em>American Cardiology: The History of a Specialty and Its College won the prestigious Welch Medal of the American Association for the History of Medicine. Oxford University Press published <\/em>Caring for the Heart: Mayo Clinic and the Rise of Specialization in 2015.\u00a0<\/em>Circulating Now interviewed him about his work.<\/em><\/p>\n Circulating Now:<\/strong> Tell us a little about yourself. Where are you from? What do you do? What is your typical workday like?<\/p>\n Having retired in 2014, I am now an emeritus professor of medicine and the history of medicine at Mayo Clinic. In retirement, I am sorting through several large personal collections relating to the history of medicine. These medical collections include about 20,000 books, 10,000 prints and engravings, 10,000 pieces of ephemera, and several hundred pre-1900 letters. I met my wife Lois in high school and we have two daughters, and three grandsons, and have just welcomed a granddaughter to the world. My wife and I have donated more than 9,000 books to Mayo Clinic since 2010 and have established an endowment for the W. Bruce Fye Center for the History of Medicine at the institution.<\/p>\n CN:<\/strong> On June 22, 2016 you’ll be at NLM to talk about “The Origins and Evolution of the Mayo Clinic from 1864 to 1939: A Minnesota Family Practice Becomes an International \u2018Medical Mecca.\u2019” Could you give us a little preview of your lecture?<\/p>\n BF: <\/strong>In my talk I will explain how America\u2019s first, largest, and most influential group practice grew up in Rochester, a small town in rural Minnesota. I begin with the birth of William Worrall Mayo in 1819 and end with the death of his two sons in 1939. Many things contributed to the creation of the Mayo Clinic, but three were essential: a family of ambitious doctors, an order of Catholic sisters, and the advent of hospital-based aseptic surgery.<\/p>\n The clinic has its origins in the 1880s, when William and Charles Mayo joined their father\u2019s general practice in Rochester. The Mayo brothers, known as Dr. Will and Dr. Charlie, wanted to become specialists in surgery. They benefited from a unique set of circumstances that catapulted them from a small Minnesota town into an international orbit in two decades. Their success as surgeons owed much to the Franciscan Sisters who opened and staffed St. Mary\u2019s Hospital in Rochester in 1889. After a trip to the town in 1905, Johns Hopkins surgeon Harvey Cushing told his physician-father that the Mayo brothers \u201chave built up a wonderful operative clinic and are well protected by an able staff of internists, specialists, etc. and are little likely to make mistakes. They do as good and as much surgery in their own particular lines as any other two men in the world. It has become worthily quite a Mecca for medical men.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/a>Bruce Fye:\u00a0 <\/strong>I was born and raised in Pennsylvania and received my BA and MD degrees from Johns Hopkins. I completed a medical residency at New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center in Manhattan before returning to Hopkins for a cardiology fellowship. I chaired the Cardiology Department at Marshfield Clinic in Wisconsin from 1981 to 1999 and joined the Mayo Clinic in 2000. In addition to being a cardiologist at Mayo Clinic, I was the founding director of the institution\u2019s Center for the History of Medicine.<\/p>\n
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Courtesy Mayo Clinic Archives<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n <\/a>
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