The Late President McKinley
It is beyond the province of the
medical press to keep its readers informed on matters of general
news which the daily papers treat so much more promptly and exhaustively.
Comment on such matters in professional journals is often injudicious,
and seldom productive of any good; but it is only right to make
some passing allusion here to our recent national tragedy.
Our readers, like other good citizens,
heard of the assassination of President McKinley with feelings of
horror and consternation. After the first shock we felt a pardonable
professional pride in the fact that this president could be treated
so much more skilfully [sic] than had been possible in the
case of his martyred predecessors, and that members of our profession
had taken up the awful responsibility thrust upon them without any
evidences of indecision or uncertainty. We read the bulletins announcing
his continued improvement with perhaps less assurance than our fellow
citizens not so conversant with the uncertainties of abdominal surgery,
but still with optimism. We were slower than the public to credit
the startling change of condition that preceded the end and to give
up hope, because there had been but the slightest indications of
the approach of any such calamity. And when at last it became certain
that the plot of a criminal without even the excuse of insanity
had been successful, and that a murder conceived in cold blood had
been accomplished, our feelings were identical with those of our
fellow citizens. We shared the consternation of a nation deprived
without warning of its head; we shared the sympathy for the invalid
suddenly deprived of her lover and protector; above all we shared
the personal regret for one great as a public officer but greatest
and most beloved as the noblest type of good citizenship and true
manhood.
If anything, we have cause for a deeper
regret than others because the incident which at first promised
to unfold to a wondering world the mar- [217][218]
velous advances in surgical skill since Garfield’s time has instead
distinctly tended to lessen the respect of the public for our whole
profession. It was not any lack of surgical skill that we have to
deplore, for so far as we can see nothing was done or left undone
that was not based on good judgment of all knowable conditions.
It was not the issue of bulletins of too optimistic a tone, for
it was a public duty at such a time to offer every possible encouragement.
We give all praise to the operator who did all that human skill
could do to save his distinguished patient. He would have received
our felicitations had the outcome been happier as he now has our
sympathy.
To what, then, is due the grave public
disapproval seen in every country newspaper? Though our colleagues
did not show any lack of surgical skill, they exemplified one of
the great evils of divided responsibility—they talked too much.
It is difficult enough under ordinary circumstances to elude the
ubiquitous reporter, and the pressure for interviews must have been
tremendous, since hardly any escaped; but nothing of even personal
profit was to be gained by the exploitation of theories in the public
press, and not content with offering incomplete individual theories
many variations of opinion were published as to actual facts. So
evident did this discord become that the impression prevails that
Mr. McKinley’s case was not understood; that the treatment was wrong,
and the result unnecessarily fatal. These conclusions are, in our
opinion, without basis of fact, but nevertheless we have to add
them to our professional handicap. The public has always thought
that the lamented Garfield died of too many doctors, and it is no
fault of our colleagues if their freedom of speech does not lead
it to add a second notable instance in support of its theory.
This same tendency to talk too much
has been evident far beyond the circle of the president’s advisors.
We have nothing but praise for the surgeons who testify publicly
to the unquestioned surgical skill of the men under fire and urge
us to assume till we have evidence of the contrary that this same
skill was exercised in the case of our president. But what can we
say of the men who if not distinguished themselves are at least
the assistants of distinguished men, who from a distance of 500
or 1,000 miles offer criticisms in the public press? We suppose
they hope to extend their local reputation, but we regret the fact
that in our profession more than in any other are so many men whose
education has not extended to the point of differentiating fame
from notoriety.
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