Traitors in the Ranks
I following
the death and autopsy of the late President, there appeared signed
articles in the daily press from several prominent physicians in
this city, and an editorial in a leading medical journal, openly
criticizing the physicians who attended President McKinley in a
manner that has stung the whole medical fraternity into expressions
of shame and scorn—shame that the editor of a journal that has always
upheld the honor and dignity of the profession should have stooped
from his high position to traduce by innuendo and covert criticism
the medical men who attended the late President; scorn that any
physician should have sunk to the level of the scandal mongers of
the sensational press and deliberately suggest to an excited and
believing public weapons of suspicion to be used at random against
the men who have handled this famous case.
It can readily be imagined that it
must have been trying to the yellow journals that the X-ray apparatus
was not used, and that they were defrauded of a skiagram of the
dying President; but that any physician should sneer at the conscientious
conclusions reached by the anxious surgeons to dispense with the
X-rays and should state concerning this opinion that “it seemed
safer to guess than to be sure” is, we feel, little short of an
insult. “What excuse,” is asked, “must be offered to the public
for the utter inability to find the bullet even in the dead body?”
But why, we ask, should the sympathetic, overwrought public think
of demanding excuses from the medical men who by their strenuous
efforts prolonged, for a week, the life of the doomed President,
unless the idea had been suggested? To hint to the public that they
are aggrieved and that they have a right to ask the surgeons to
explain “why they allowed a lost ball to be buried with the victim’s
body” is little short of trying to make the Nation’s tragedy a popular
spectacle.
It is not, however, this gallery play
that deserves the severest condemnation. It is the subtle way in
which many of these articles have been worded so that while they
seem to mingle praise for the surgeons with lamentations over the
inevitable, they nevertheless convey to the reader a startled sense
of suspicion and alarm that all was not done that might have been
done. We are ashamed of this utter violation of professional standards,
of the manifest unfairness of making charges when the accusers could
not possibly be in possession of the full details of the case, of
the lack of charity in dealing treacherous, underhand blows to the
few and of this holding up to public criticism a vicious cartoon
of medical men so prominent that the entire medical profession must
bear the scoffs. It is these things that have amazed, pained and
angered the American medical brotherhood.
To so cruelly and maliciously hint
that a “fatal blunder in diagnosis has been made,” especially after
the autopsy had demonstrated the necessarily fatal character of
the wound, is evidence of a very low standard of professional ethics,
and it is not to be wondered that the attending surgeons and the
medical profession of the country should feel the affront and demand
an apology.
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