A
brief overview of medicine as it developed worldwide
provides a context for the medical history of Utah.
Medicine men and women played, and are still playing,
a very important role in primitive tribes throughout
the world. Much real knowledge has accumulated, and
many drugs now in common use in modern medicine, such
as digitalis and quinine, came from this source. Taxol,
from yew tree bark, used in treating ovarian carcinoma,
is the most recent addition.
Some evidence of early surgery has been found in skeletons
of many primitive peoples in the form of trephines--surgical
holes in the head--which supposedly allowed evil spirits
to escape from the brain. Throughout the Middle Ages,
barber-surgeons performed amputations and other emergency
procedures. The lack of anesthesia until the mid-nineteenth
century (chloroform and ether) prevented the more widespread
use of surgery. In general, these early medical experts
tried to follow the primary principle of Aristotle:
"First, do no harm!"
The beginnings of scientific medicine date to 1796 when
Edward Jenner, in England, first vaccinated milkmaids
against cow pox. Not until 1840 was it recognized that
certain diseases were transmitted by external agents:
Ignaz Semmelwis in Vienna demonstrated that childbed
fever was transmitted by the dirty hands of physicians;
and John Snow in London ascribed an epidemic of cholera
to contamination of water.
The science of bacteriology was initiated in the latter
part of the nineteenth century by Louis Pasteur in France
and by Robert Koch in Germany. Their work led to the
identification of the offending organisms that caused
pneumococcal pneumonia, typhoid fever, and cholera,
among other diseases.
In 1905 Schaudin and Hoffman identified the specific
cause of syphilis. Four years later, Paul Ehrlich initiated
treatment of the disease with Salvarsan, an arsenic
compound--the first application of a specific drug in
the successful treatment of an infectious disease.
Despite the development of certain vaccines and the
steadily improving hygiene and public health, the average
life expectancy did not increase significantly during
the nineteenth century. Infectious diseases continued
to dominate the practice of medicine and be the primary
cause of death until the mid-1930s when sulfonamides,
the first of the antibiotics, came into use.
Medical Education in the United States and Canada
In 1870 there were 474 medical schools in the United
States and Canada, three to four times as many as there
are today. Most were proprietary--groups of doctors
banding together more to enrich themselves than to educate
future physicians. Utah was no exception. In 1880 a
forty-three-year-old physician, Dr. Frederick Kohler,
established the state's first medical school in Morgan,
Utah, forty-two miles northeast of Salt Lake City. In
1882 the "college" honored its only graduating
class of six students and then closed its doors. In
1904 the Council on Medical Education of the American
Medical Association (AMA) suggested standards of six
years for medical education beyond high school and devised
a classification system for rating the existing schools.
Only 82 of the 160 schools then in existence were found
to be acceptable; many others had already closed down.
In 1908 the Carnegie Foundation commissioned Dr. Abraham
Flexner to assess U.S. medical schools. His report,
issued in 1910, revolutionized North American medical
education.
Utah Territorial Medicine (1850-1896)
During the first twenty to thirty years after the pioneers
settled the Salt Lake Valley, the only healers were
"Thomsonian" doctors who acquired their knowledge
and "license" by paying $20.00 to a "Dr.
Thomson" for a book on herbal medicine and the
right to dispense his herbs. Others followed the maxim
of "puke 'em, sweat 'em, purge 'em." No wonder
Brigham Young advised the Saints to heal each other
by the "laying on of hands."
Rising maternal and child death rates prompted Brigham
Young to encourage some women living in polygamy who
had already borne children to study medicine at the
Woman's Medical College in Philadelphia; but there was
no provision for their financial support. When these
women returned home in the summer to earn money to support
themselves during the school year, many became pregnant
again, which added to their financial and emotional
woes. Ellis Shipp began medical school in 1872 and took
advanced training in obstetrics and gynecology. The
"grand old lady of Utah medicine" is credited
with founding a school of midwifery, and she delivered
thousands of babies and published widely in the areas
of hygiene and public health. Another woman, Dr. Romania
Pratt, took special training in ophthalmology and performed
the first cataract operation in the territory.
However, the early prominence of women in Utah medicine
lasted for only one generation. A significant increase
of female students and physicians did not begin until
the 1970s and 1980s, but with only 17 percent female
medical students in the early 1990s, Utah remains below
the national average of thirty-five percent.
Statehood (1896) to the Present
The University of Utah was founded in 1850. Fifty-five
years later, in 1905, the school's Department of Medicine
was formed with six professors and an annual budget
of $10,000. The name was changed to University of Utah
Medical School in 1912, but the program was still limited
to only the first two years of a full medical course.
Graduates were required to transfer to four-year schools
in the East or Midwest to complete their training.
In 1920 a new red-brick building on the university campus,
constructed by the army as a dormitory for military
officers during the World War I, was turned over to
the medical school and served as the basic science building
until 1965. With the nation's entry into World War II
in 1941, pressure was exerted by the AMA and the U.S.
Army to convert the two-year school to a full four-year
medical school, since none existed between Denver and
San Francisco.
The expansion was approved in 1942, and the Salt Lake
General Hospital at 21st South and State streets, the
state's only public hospital, was designated as the
university's teaching facility. Dr. A.C. Callister,
a practicing surgeon appointed part-time dean in 1942,
was surprisingly successful in recruiting a small but
outstanding group of physicians, teachers, and researchers,
in spite of the appalling lack of funding and facilities
and a severe nationwide shortage of physicians.
Conditions at the Salt Lake General Hospital were poor.
An interesting incident is characteristic of the early
years: in 1944 the chief resident in surgery was performing
surgery on a patient when, in the middle of the operation,
all lights went out. He called out for the hospital
engineer, who was the only person familiar with the
antiquated wiring and plumbing of the decaying structure.
Suddenly, the staff remembered that the engineer was
the patient on the operating table. The procedure was
completed by flashlight illumination, and the patient
recovered satisfactorily.
The nucleus of the four-year faculty arrived between
1943 and 1945. Dr. Philip Price and Dr. Maxwell Wintrobe
came from Johns Hopkins; Drs. John Anderson, Robert
Alway, and A. Louis Dippel, Emil Holmstromb, and Dr.
Leo Samuels, came from the University of Minnesota;
Dr. Louis Goodman and Dr. Thomas F. Dougherty came from
Yale.
From the very beginning, this was no ordinary medical
school. The commitments to teaching, quality of patient
care, and research were remarkable. The school started
with a dreadfully inadequate physical plant and a minimal
budget supported by a state population of only 600,000.
Outstanding teachers included Drs. Lou Goodman, Max
Wintrobe, and Tom Dougherty. Goodman (pharmacology)
was the author of the textbook The Pharmacologic
Basis of Therapeutics, used the world over, then
and now; more than one and a half million copies have
been printed, in sixteen languages. Max Wintrobe, author
of the pioneer textbook on hematology, was an outstanding
teacher, researcher, and administrator. A hard-working,
strict disciplinarian who set very high standards, he
required demanding individual case presentations. He
refused to accept married house officers, with the explanation
that "you can only have one love--medicine."
After a senior resident got married secretly, for fear
of being fired, the unwritten rule was rescinded in
1950. Tom Dougherty was a man of ideas. He posed questions
that stimulated others to initiate research projects
and was prolific in his own output as well.
At the end of World War II, Leo Marshall, professor
of public health and twice acting dean of the University
of Utah Medical School, suggested to Senator Elbert
Thomas of Utah that it would be very useful if wartime
support for scientific research given to the armed services
could be adapted to the support of civilian scientific
institutions through the public health service. As a
result of Senator Thomas's efforts, Congress appropriated
$100,000, but 100 grant applications were received.
Senator Thomas prevailed in awarding the entire $100,000,
then a princely sum, to the University of Utah. The
grant was renewed for twenty-eight years under Dr. Wintrobe's
direction and amounted to many millions of dollars.
The initial town-and-gown relationship between practicing
physicians and the university faculty left something
to be desired. Some physicians actually opposed the
formation of the four-year school, fearing competition
for their patients. Dr. Hans Hecht, pioneer academic
cardiologist, and Dr. Ernst Eichwald, pathologist and
early expert on tissue transplantation--both graduates
of German medical schools--were required to enroll as
senior students in the medical school to obtain American
M.D. degrees in order to be licensed in Utah. The Utah
State Board of Examiners was unwilling to grant an exemption
in spite of the outstanding contributions both men were
already making in their respective fields. Fortunately,
this tension disappeared as some of the oldtimers died
out and graduates of the University of Utah formed a
large majority of the area's practicing physicians.
Hans Hecht exemplifies the ingenuity, modesty, and commitment
of the early faculty. When he arrived in 1944, at a
salary of $2,000 per year, no space could be found for
his activities. He noticed an auditorium in the infirmary
and suggested having the floor rebuilt. The triangular
space created served as the heart station and Hecht's
research laboratory for many years.
The growth of the medical school profoundly affected
the quality of medicine in Utah and especially in the
Wasatch Front communities. The presence of the four-year
school not only brought many well-qualified experts
to the faculty but also acted as a powerful magnet to
attract well-trained specialists from many other centers
to practice in the community and to seek clinical (teaching)
appointments in the medical school. More and more of
the best medical students from Utah were guided by the
faculty to the best post-graduate training programs
in the East and Midwest. The new doctors returned to
fill vacancies on the faculty or to relieve shortages
in the community. The medical school also stimulated
an unusual amount of research in the local private hospitals.
The increasing number of training programs at the University
of Utah Medical School provided more and more specialists
in Salt Lake City, Ogden, Provo, and eventually throughout
Utah and the entire Intermountain area.
The original postwar faculty of six members in the Department
of Medicine covered the entire field of internal medicine,
took care of all medical patients, taught medical students
on a four-quarter schedule, and initiated significant
research programs. Drs. Max Wintrobe and George Cartwright
concentrated on hematology, Hans Hecht on cardiology,
Frank Tyler on endocrinology and metabolism, Val Jager
on neurology and syphilology, and Utah native John Waldo
on infectious diseases. Two additional departments have
since been created: Neurology and Family and Preventive
Medicine. By 1992 the Department of Medicine had grown
to 202 members in thirteen divisions. The Department
of Surgery, consisting of three full-time members in
1947, now comprises eighty-one members in ten divisions,
and two divisions have become separate departments:
Ophthalmology and Neurosurgery.
Practice of Medicine
The general practitioner was the main supplier of medical
care throughout the first half of the twentieth century.
After graduation from medical school, he (or much less
frequently, she) spent one or two years in an internship
and frequently apprenticed himself for a few years to
an older practitioner. He took care of all members of
the family, regardless of age, delivered babies, diagnosed
and treated medical illnesses, and performed a fair
amount of surgery. The family doctor, as a valued friend
and counselor, made many house calls and often was loved
and respected.
Specialization in internal medicine and surgery began
after World War I. Many physicians assigned to specialty
wards in military hospitals proceeded to take special
training after their discharge, often working at the
fine medical centers in Europe--Berlin, Vienna, London,
and Edinburgh. Specialty boards began to be formed in
the 1930s and 1940s, and formal three-to-five-year residencies
were soon required in many fields. Some Utah physicians
who had restricted their practices to certain specialties
before World War I were the key organizers of several
clinics in Salt Lake City, notably the Salt Lake Clinic
(1915), Intermountain Clinic (1917), Bryner Clinic (1941),
and Memorial Medical Center (1953).
The specialization process was vastly accelerated by
World War II. The G.I. Bill of Rights enabled many veteran
physicians to enter specialty training and qualify for
board examination, changing the character of medical
practice in the late 1940s and 1950s.
The general internist began to replace the general practitioner
as the primary-care physician, especially in urban areas,
and also became the consultant to the general practitioner
in more complicated problems of diagnosis and treatment.
The increasing subspecialization of surgery into orthopedic,
eye, ear-nose-throat, chest, neuro-plastic, pediatric
surgery, etc., continued to erode the field of the general
surgeon.
In the late 1950s and 1960s, further subspecialization
of internal medicine changed some areas from predominantly
"thinking" to "doing" fields. The
gastroenterologist learned to pass scopes through the
mouth and the rectum, and the pulmonologist started
to use the bronchoscope. The cardiologist began implanting
cardiac pacemakers and passing catheters. The increased
compensation for these procedures helped to lure young
physicians into the subspecialties, and the general
internist became an endangered species.
Fortunately, the Department of Family and Preventive
Medicine at the University of Utah, formed in 1970 by
Dr. C. Hilmon Castle, created a three-year residency
in Family Practice leading to medical board certification.
This program stresses the areas of medicine and pediatrics
but also provides some training in obstetrics, surgery,
and psychiatry, tailored to some degree to the location
of the intended practice. From 1970 to 1992, 262 family
practice physicians were graduated, of whom half chose
to practice in smaller communities and rural areas to
replace the vanishing general practitioner.
Since the 1970s and 1980s, preventive medicine has suffered
from the lack of primary-care physicians. Patients without
a family doctor and those who have no insurance and
can't afford preventive medical care have been flocking
to hospital emergency rooms, having neglected early
warning signs. There, with no previous acquaintance
with the physician and no medical "history,"
they receive the most expensive and most impersonal
form of medical care.
While "hanging out a shingle" was the expected
step following medical training in the past, fewer and
fewer young physicians now go into solo practice or
join another physician. The cost of setting up an office
after having incurred considerable debt going to school,
as well as the prospect of having to be at the beck
and call of patients at all hours and on weekends, directs
many young M.D.s to seek employment by hospital emergency
rooms, existing clinics, or health maintenance organizations
(HMOs).
Family Health Plan (FHP), the first and largest Utah
HMO, began operations in Utah in 1976 and by 1992 cared
for 140,000 patients annually. HMOs are attractive to
the employer who pays much of the cost of employees'
health insurance because of their generally lower rates
and broader coverage. The patient chooses a primary-care
physician--internist, family practitioner, or pediatrician.
These doctors see the patients first and decide on procedures
and, if necessary, refer them to specialists. Another
physician is frequently substituted, particularly when
a patient is hospitalized, since the physician is obligated
to work only 40 to 44 hours per week. Physicians are
on salary but are rewarded for keeping costs down. The
average age of patients covered by HMOs is significantly
lower than that of the population at large.
Some Outstanding Research Accomplishments
Utah physicians and medical researchers have made many
important contributions, locally, nationally, and internationally.
A few significant landmarks are mentioned here.
In 1900 the major causes of death were infectious diseases
such as pneumonia, tuberculosis, and the childhood diseases.
By mid-century heart disease, stroke, and cancer had
climbed to the top of the list, with infectious diseases
at the bottom. Technological advances in public health
(such as water- and sewage-treatment plants) played
a major role in nearly eliminating intestinal infections
in the United States, and vaccination accomplished wonders
in reducing childhood diseases. Simultaneously, however,
increased tobacco and alcohol use, and other lifestyle
changes, as well as rapidly increasing pollution by
chemicals and radiation, contributed to the increase
in cancer and heart disease.
In the 1940s and 1950s, a concerted effort by several
cooperating departments of the University of Utah Medical
Center, under the leadership of Dr. Leo Samuels, resulted
in significant new knowledge concerning the chemistry
and physiology of the adrenal glands.
Dr. Frank Tyler and his associates in the Department
of Medicine laid the groundwork for later genetic studies
through their investigation of several familial diseases
such as muscular dystrophy, phenylketonuria, polyposis
of the bowel, and others. Geneticist Eldon Gardner studied
familial polyposis of the large bowel associated with
benign subcutaneous tumors (Gardner's Syndrome). Radiologist
Henry Plenk discovered multiple bony tumors associated
in all patients with this condition (Plenk-Gardner Syndrome).
The hematology section explored the mechanisms and treatment
of various anemias and supported Wintrobe's pioneering
efforts in treating lymphomas and leukemias with chemotherapy.
Utah was selected as one of four centers funded to develop
a polio vaccine; the breakthroughs came in Pittsburgh
in 1953 and in Cincinnati in 1954. Through inventive
public-vaccination campaigns, poliomyelitis was effectively
wiped out. The infectious disease section played a major
role in the recognition of toxic shock syndrome in women
and its relationship to a brand of "super"
tampons being test-marketed regionally.
In gastroenterology, the development of newer drugs
to reduce gastric acidity reduced the need for gastric
resection of peptic ulcers. The development and perfection
of upper and lower gastrointestinal (G.I.) flexible
endoscopy revolutionized the diagnosis and treatment
of many diseases of the G.I. tract and allowed biopsies
and removal of polyps without major surgery.
In pulmonary medicine, a drive to eradicate tuberculosis
by early diagnosis and chemoprophylaxis with the drug
Isoniazid led to a dramatic reduction of the disease,
particularly among the state's Native American population,
and the eventual closing of the State Tuberculosis Hospital
in Roy, Utah, in 1967.
LDS Hospital played a leading role in pioneering a pulmonary
function laboratory and setting up the first shock/trauma
intensive care unit (ICU). In conjunction with the University
of Utah, LDS created a program in occupational and environmental
health and critical care. Life Flight by helicopter
or fixed-wing aircraft speeded up the initiation of
critical care.
The institution of hemodialysis for renal failure prolonged
many lives, but kidney transplants eventually proved
not only more effective but also less expensive. The
first renal transplant in Utah was performed at Salt
Lake General Hospital in 1965, and the patient was still
living in 1992.
Dr. Willem J. Kolff, the originator of hemodialysis,
the artificial kidney, and artificial heart, joined
the University of Utah Medical Center in 1968. This
major boost to the artificial organs program resulted
in the implanting of an artificial heart in dentist
Barney Clark in 1982. Pioneering artificial eyes, ears,
and arms have been additional tangible results.
Dr. Ray Rumel was the pioneer thoracic surgeon. His
removal of a lobe of the lung for cancer at LDS Hospital,
resulting in a nineteen-year survival for the patient,
was a truly innovative procedure in 1942. Then came
open-heart surgery to correct congenital cardiac abnormalities
and to replace defective valves. Reconstruction of narrowed
blood vessels, aorta, renal arteries, and coronary arteries
prevented many complications of arteriosclerosis.
Continued progress in thoracic surgery led to the formation
of a team of surgeons doing heart transplants in four
hospitals. The survival rate of 90 percent one year
after surgery in 412 transplants performed from 1985
to 1992 is one of the best in the country.
Homer Warner deserves credit for developing the most
sophisticated system of utilizing computers in total
patient care, making LDS Hospital a model for the world.
One of the most far-reaching new tools, the laser, was
applied to medicine by John A. Dixon. The laser is now
used in most surgical specialties worldwide to stop
bleeding and to destroy malignant tissues, among other
uses. Between 1982 and 1992, more than 1,500 patients
were treated with his new device, and more than 1,500
physicians from all over the world were trained at the
University of Utah to use the method successfully. Except
for some minor burns, no serious complications were
encountered during the development of the procedures.
The dramatic decrease in neonatal deaths from fifteen
to three per 1,000 live births in Utah during the twenty-year
period from 1968 to 1988 was due in great part to the
efforts of Dr. August L. Jung, who created neonatal
intensive care units (NICUs) first at the University
of Utah, Primary Children's Medical Center, and LDS
Hospital, and then in all major hospitals in the area.
Dr. David Bragg (appointed in 1970) changed the character
of the Department of Radiology at the university and
the practice of radiology in the state by introducing
many modern methods such as angiography, CT and MRI
scanning, and interventive radiology. Through his success
in attracting massive research grants, his staff has
produced a prolific scientific output (150 to 200 papers
per year) as well as some fifty textbooks.
The first modern radiation therapy facility between
Denver and the Pacific Coast was established by Drs.
Henry P. Plenk and Richard Y. Card at St. Mark's Hospital
in 1960. The Tumor Institute became the Radiation Center
when it moved to a yet more modern facility at LDS Hospital
in 1969. Plenk pioneered in the use of two procedures
to enhance the effect of radiation on tumors: hyperbaric
oxygen and hyperthermia. Intraoperative radiation therapy
was another major innovation fostered by Drs. William
T. Sause and R. Dirk Noyes at LDS Hospital.
The Division of Radiation Oncology at the University
of Utah was instituted in 1971 with the appointment
of Dr. J. Robert Stewart, who established a productive
section in radiation biology. He and his staff became
very involved in hyperthermia. In 1986 Stewart became
director of an important cancer center at the University
of Utah and affiliated hospitals.
Sports medicine emerged in the early 1970s, largely
as a result of the development of arthroscopy by Dr.
Robert Metcalf, team physician at Brigham Young University
and later a University of Utah Medical School staff
member. The procedure revolutionized knee surgery and
is now used in shoulder surgery as well. Prosthetic
replacement of hips and knees was also a major advance.
Among the many advances in general surgery, two innovations
deserve special mention: the use of staples in place
of sutures, and the use of the peritoneoscope, first
to explore the abdomen and more recently in the performance
of actual procedures such as removal of the gallbladder
or uterus.
From the beginning of the computerization by Dr. Mark
Skolnick of the genealogical library of the LDS Church,
Raymond Gesteland, Ray White, and colleagues have been
very successful in proving the genetic origin of many
disease and in pinpointing specific locations of important
disease genes. The Institute of Human Genetics houses
three major programs: the Department of Human Genetics,
the Human Molecular Biology and Genetics Program, and
the Center for Human Genome Research, one of six such
centers in the United States.
Medical Practice: Then, Now, and in the Future
In spite of the phenomenal progress in the science
of medicine and the many contributions of Utah physicians,
the art of medicine nationwide took a step backward
in the late twentieth century. Prior to the initiation
of Medicare in 1966, physicians felt responsible for
taking care of all patients, regardless of their ability
to pay, either in tax-supported hospitals or in their
offices. Even many private hospitals had charity services.
Medicare certainly had a profound effect on the practice
of medicine by removing the elderly and many widows
from the medically indigent group, while high inflation
during the 1970s and 1980s, rapid progress in medical
technology, and further implementation of technical
procedures boosted the cost of medical care. A significant
increase in the number of medical school graduates with
an even higher percentage training in the subspecialties
rather than the primary care areas (internal and family
medicine, pediatrics, and obstetrics) contributed to
rising costs.
Three further events had a devastating effect. First,
a ruling by the Federal Trade Commission in 1979, supported
by a Supreme Court decision in 1982, declared medicine
(as well as law) a "business" rather than
a "profession." This opened the floodgates
to advertising by physicians and hospitals, which fostered
excessively luxurious buildings and facilities to compete
for physicians and their referrals. Second, administrative
costs skyrocketed because of government regulations
and insurance requirements, eating up more than twenty
percent of the medical dollar. Third, the abandonment
of the tightly controlled "certificate of need"
in 1985 deregulated local decision-making regarding
requirements for new facilities and equipment and allowed
a very wasteful duplication of hospitals and expensive
machines. Six new psychiatric hospitals were quickly
built in Utah, whereas, only a short time before, a
few wards had filled the need.
The result of these errors and omissions was that thirty-five
percent of the population was without any health insurance
coverage, and sixty to seventy million people nationwide
were without adequate access to high-quality medical
care.
Reform of the medical care system was an important issue
in the 1992 election campaign. Numerous plans were supported
by the candidates and discussed in congressional committees.
The American College of Physicians, the largest medical
organization in the United States after the AMA, supported
the concept that adequate medical care is a right, not
a privilege, and that universal access can be achieved
only through system-wide reform. It suggested four principles:
(1) assuring access to care; (2) assuring high-quality,
comprehensive coverage; (3) promoting innovation and
excellence; and (4) controlling costs by a combination
of employee-sponsored and publicly sponsored insurance
covering the entire population. To bring these changes
about, private insurance companies would need to provide
benefits identical to those in publicly sponsored plans.
All patients would be eligible regardless of prior existing
conditions; coverage could not be canceled and could
be transferred to other employment.
It was considered imperative by policy makers and practitioners
that national health care spending be capped at the
1992 level of $800 billion. The savings gained by eliminating
inflated administrative costs, needless duplication
of facilities, overpriced care, and unnecessary malpractice
suits would provide for complete coverage of the entire
population.
In the early 1990s, several communities and some states
were well on their way to achieving these lofty goals.
The state of Hawaii has been very successful in providing
comprehensive coverage to an increasing segment of the
population since 1975. By 1992, 98 percent of the population
was included, and a goal of 100 percent was anticipated.
Hawaii's system stresses primary and preventive care
and eliminates elective procedures and much high-tech
tertiary care, especially in the terminal patient.
For many Utahns as well as other Americans, health and
medical care had replaced war and the threat of nuclear
destruction as the most important issues facing the
nation at the end of the century. Those decisions made
in the coming years will undoubtedly affect every citizen.
Henry P. Plenk