Bulletin of the History of Medicine
Volume 79, Number 3, Fall 2005
E-ISSN: 1086-3176 Print ISSN: 0007-5140
DOI: 10.1353/bhm.2005.0105
Gillis, Jonathan.
Taking a Medical History in Childhood Illness: Representations of Parents in Pediatric Texts since 1850
Bulletin of the History of Medicine - Volume 79, Number 3, Fall 2005, pp. 393-429
The Johns Hopkins University Press
SUMMARY: The pediatric clinical encounter is initiated when a sick child is pre- sented to a physician and the physician takes a history from the parent. This article casts the physician's construction of that encounter in a central role in the history of the theory and practice of children's medicine. The focus is on what physicians have written about the conduct of such encounters, and specifically on their attitudes to and instructions for the taking of a history. This analysis reveals that medical writings on the taking of a medical history provide a window into how pediatric writers wanted their discipline to be conducted, what they identified as the normative principles of pediatric practice, and how they portrayed parents. The texts show a striking continuity in the ambivalence expressed by practitioner authors about the parental role in the clinical assessment of sick children. What emerges is both a regret that the physician must be dependent on parental history for clinical assessment, and a message that any doctor dealing with children should both value the parental history and distrust it. Because history taking is a fundamental, core medical activity, these normative principles and representations of parents were dispersed easily, widely, and unconsciously within pediatric practice. They also provide a link to the wider contexts of physicians' involvement in child rearing, the influence of psychiatry, and the fundamental gender structure of the clinical encounter.
Project MUSE® - View Citation
Gillis, Jonathan. "Taking a Medical History in Childhood Illness: Representations of Parents in Pediatric Texts since 1850." Bulletin of the History of Medicine 79.3 (2005): 393-429. Project MUSE. [Library name], [City], [State abbreviation]. 9 Feb. 2010 <http://muse.jhu.edu/>.
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Gillis, Jonathan. (2005). Taking a medical history in childhood illness: Representations of parents in pediatric texts since 1850. Bulletin of the History of Medicine 79(3), 393-429. Retrieved February 9, 2010, from Project MUSE database.
Always review your references for accuracy and make any necessary corrections before using. Pay special attention to personal names,
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Gillis, Jonathan. "Taking a Medical History in Childhood Illness: Representations of Parents in Pediatric Texts since 1850." Bulletin of the History of Medicine 79, no. 3 (2005): 393-429. http://muse.jhu.edu/ (accessed February 9, 2010).
Always review your references for accuracy and make any necessary corrections before using. Pay special attention to personal names,
capitalization, and dates. Consult your library or click
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information on citing sources.
TY - JOUR
T1 - Taking a Medical History in Childhood Illness: Representations of Parents in Pediatric Texts since 1850
A1 - Gillis, Jonathan.
JF - Bulletin of the History of Medicine
VL - 79
IS - 3
SP - 393
EP - 429
Y1 - 2005
PB - The Johns Hopkins University Press
SN - 1086-3176
UR - http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/bulletin_of_the_history_of_medicine/v079/79.3gillis.html
N1 - Volume 79, Number 3, Fall 2005
ER -
Always review your references for accuracy and make any necessary corrections before using. Pay special attention to personal names,
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information on citing sources.