Sunday, September 21, 2014

Windsor County Court August 11


Shayne Trombley, DOB 2/18/73, pled not guilty to a charge of operating with a suspended license in Hartford on June 23.  Trombley has pending court cases regarding charges of possession of heroin and violating conditions of release in Hartford on April 6.  You can read about the April charges here: http://www.vermonttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/RH/20140412/NEWS02/704129953

Joshua Mitchell, DOB 12/12/88, pled not guilty to a charge of sale of narcotics in Weathersfield on December 11, a charge of sale of narcotics in Weathersfield on January 3, and a charge of sale of narcotics in Weathersfield on January 24.

Norman Bevins DOB 2/3/42, pled guilty to a charge of home improvement fraud in Hartford in 2014

Michael Stringer, DOB 1/19/70, pled no contest to a charge of unlawful mischief greater than $250 in Stockbridge on July 11.

Sawyer Deen, DOB 4/6/92, pled not guilty to charges of operating a motor vehicle with excessive speed and careless and/or negligent operation of a motor vehicle, in Sharon on June 16.  Read about these charges here: http://vtstatepolice.blogspot.com/2014/06/excessive-speed-and-negligent.html

Rodney Stone, DOB 12/15/83, was charged with his second DUI, in Springfield on June 27

Nicholas Lynch, DOB 9/15/80, pled not guilty to charges of sale of heroin in Springfield on February 12 and February 26

Britney Parson, DOB 6/26/89, pled not guilty to a charge of burglary and unlawful mischief greater than $1000 in Weathersfield on April 16

Victoria Williams, DOB 9/13/85, pled not guilty to a charge of her 2nd DUI, in Norwich on August 3

Christopher Drew, DOB 3/1/89, pled not guilty to a charge of his 1st DUI, in Norwich on August 6

Matthew Russell, DOB 6/27/78, pled not guilty to a charge of his 2nd DUI, in Springfield on July 27

Herbert Hart, DOB 5/5/70, pled not guilty to a charge of his 1st DUI, and a charge of leaving the scene of an accident, in Hartford on July 28

Windsor County Crime Online:


Michael Philips, age 27 arrested in Royalton: http://vtstatepolice.blogspot.com/2014/07/press-release_982.html

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Nathan Smith and Smallpox Inoculation


Nathan Smith was an important doctor in the Upper Valley in the late 1700’s, if not the only doctor.  He married Sally Chase, Jonathan Chase’s daughter, and they lived right across the road from Colonel Chase in Cornish.  Emily Smith wrote a biography of her grandfather-in-law, The Life and Letters of Nathan Smith. In her book, she said that Nathan’s practice encompassed an hour fifty miles in diameter..

            Nathan gained the credentials he needed to begin a medical practice by serving as an apprentice for a well-respected, established doctor in Southern Vermont. After he had been in practice for a few years, he decided he needed formal medical training and became the 5th student to receive a Bachelor’s in Medicine degree from Harvard. 

            Nathan took medical education seriously, and often had a medical student or two living with him and helping with his practice as apprentices. We get an idea of how he ran his household from a comment in one of his student’s diaries regarding a visit to Nathan’s home prior to his apprenticeship.  The student says, “I am not likely to be burdened with compliments, for, all the time I was there, Smith had not introduced us to the ladies of the family, and three were sitting silently engaged in needlework.” The student seemed to assume that Nathan’s lack of courtesy toward the female members of his family would likely extend to the newest and perhaps lowliest newcomer.

            This interesting tidbit notwithstanding, we can assume that Sally was called upon to assist with some of her husband’s medical endeavors.  The 1790 Cornish town report documents that Dr Nathan Smith “shall have the liberty to erect a pesthouse and inoculate for the small-pox.  A pest house was a sort of hospital, a building where the town constables and doctors would quarantine people who were sick with a communicable disease, usually smallpox, but sometimes other diseases as well.  These people would be confined to the pesthouse until they either died or got well. One wonders whether Sally helped with these inoculations or whether the apprentices did. The fact that Nathan himself was given the liberty to erect the pesthouse seems to indicate that he also had responsibility for the patients within them.

            When Nathan was at Harvard, one of the three medical school professors there was Benjamin Waterhouse, the first doctor in America to practice inoculation for smallpox.  Smallpox inoculations at that time involved making a scratch in a person’s skin and introducing matter from cowpox pustules into the scratch.  Cowpox was a non-lethal illness similar to smallpox.  People who had gotten cowpox were immune to smallpox. Edwin Jenner had developed the smallpox vaccine in England.  Waterhouse introduced it to America by inoculating his own children.  Then he inoculated a servant boy and sent him to a pesthouse, where he did not contract the disease.  Nathan studied under Waterhouse and came home to Cornish believing in smallpox inoculation.  The fact that the Cornish town report mentions a pesthouse and inoculation in the same entry probably means that anyone who was inoculated had to be quarantined in the pesthouse for a period of time, just in case they came down with smallpox. Inoculation was a brand-new procedure, and many people thought that it was unsafe and probably wouldn’t work. 

            Smallpox and cowpox were originally European diseases.  Waterhouse made a lot of enemies by insisting that doctors throughout America doing inoculations buy the inoculant from him only, thus insuring that he had a monopoly on the vaccine.  Without a doubt any vaccine used in Cornish or anywhere in the Upper Valley came from Waterhouse. The vaccine consisted of some pus or serum scraped onto a piece of cotton string from a cowpox lesion on a patient in England and shipped to America.  Since there were no refrigerated compartments on ships, and the voyage was not quick, some of the cowpox samples were dried out and dead by the time they were used, so effectiveness was not guaranteed.  Still, the inoculations done in this primitive way were remarkably powerful in reducing smallpox cases.

            There is some confusion between the words inoculation and vaccination. They are almost interchangeable. Inoculation refers to the practice of giving people a disease, under controlled conditions, causing them to contract the disease in a less virulent form, thus developing immunity to the disease but not dying from it.  Vaccination refers to giving a person dead or weakened pathogens so that the person develops immunity to the disease without getting the disease itself, or by getting a very mild case.  Some inoculations done in America were done by taking the serum from actual smallpox pustules and infecting healthy people with it. For some reason, people who contracted smallpox in this way became much less sick than from natural smallpox. This was done if an area couldn’t get any of Waterhouse’s inoculant, or if there was an outbreak of smallpox nearby and people were scared enough to take the risk.  I believe Nathan’s method of inoculation used Waterhouse’s cowpox inoculant.  We do not  have any evidence of a smallpox outbreak near Cornish, and Nathan would have had personal ties to Waterhouse and thus would have had access to his inoculant.  That being said, the mention of a pesthouse confuses the matter.  Why would they need a pesthouse if there had not been some cases of smallpox, unless they thought they were about to have some?  I stand by my original thought that they wanted to isolate the people who were inoculated, but it is a question.

           

           

Saturday, September 13, 2014

Windsor County Court July 29


Katherine McGovern pled not guilty to a charge of her first DUI, in Royalton on July 18

 

Naomi Gould, DOB 8/8/83, pled guilty to a charge of retail theft, in Springfield on June 1

 

Steven Erie, DOB 3/2/47, pled not guilty to a charge of careless and negligent operation of a motor vehicle, in Woodstock on June 7

 

Andrew Cercena, DOB 1/18/89, pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Ludlow on July 13

 

James Smith, DOB 9/10/82, pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Ludlow on July 17

 

Matthew Deshais, DOB 6/9/75, pled not guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Ludlow on July 17

 

Brandon Langan, DOB 8/7/95, pled guilty to a charge of operating with excessive speed, in Weathersfield on June 7

 

Timothy Durkin, DOB 1/26/75, pled guilty to a charge of operating with excessive speed, in Royalton on June 3

 

Donna Kirk, DOB 8/2/48, pled guilty to a charge of retail theft, in Hartford on June 18

 

Edward Davis, DOB 8/10/86, pled guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license, in Royalton on May 22

 

James Picard, DOB 11/09/67, was charged with driving with a suspended license in Springfield on June 3.  He also had a pending charge of driving with a suspended license in Springfield on May 6.

 

Christopher Rabtoy, DOB 7/13/88, pled guilty to a charge of his first DUI, in Stockbridge on July 19

 

Adam Grover, DOB 5/24/86, pled not guilty to a charge of driving with a suspended license, in Royalton on May 29.

 

Windsor County Crime Online 

Saturday, September 6, 2014

Nathan Smith's Medical Practices - Cornish - Early 19th Century


Dr. Nathan Smith married Sally Chase, Jonathan's daughter, and built a thriving medical practice based in Cornish.  There were probably very few doctors in the Upper Valley, but even fewer who had been educated at Harvard.  Nathan graduated from Harvard in 1790, married Sally in 1791. Their first son, David Solon Chase Hall Smith, was born about 9 months later.

            Nathan quickly became well known on both sides of the Connecticut River.  In 1798, Typhus Fever hit the Upper Valley and as Nathan traveled throughout the area treating patients, he was able to track the appearance of the disease from one place to another. He tried to figure out how the disease was transmitted and also how to treat it.  His “Medical and Surgical Memoirs” published after his death, contains an essay that describes his experiences treating typhus.

            In the essay, he states that he believes that typhus is a contagious disease.  He did not believe it is caused by “miasma”, poisonous vapor coming off of swamps, for the simple reason that the cases  typhoid fever that he treated did not happen in families living near swamps, nor did the families living in the backwaters of the Connecticut River seem more likely to contract the disease.

            He believed Typhus was contagious because it was possible to track its spread as families became sick.  It always amazes me how far people traveled in those days, even though transportation was limited to horseback or stagecoach.  Dr Smith treated many people in Thetford who came down with Typhus.  The outbreak started when a woman from Thetford went to Chelsea to take care of her sister who was sick with the disease.  The sister died, the woman came home, got sick and died, and then her whole family came down with it.  In the end, 40 people in Thetford died of Typhus.

            In his essay, he tells the story of a young man from Plainfield who went to Western New York State for a while, then returned home.  On the way home, he became sick and when he arrived home he was diagnosed with Typhus. Soon after he was diagnosed, 9 more members of his family came down with it. He does say that although there is some evidence of contagion, some people get sick with the disease without any clear evidence of their having caught it from someone else who had it. Another reason he gives for it being a contagious disease is that if a patient got Typhus and recovered, they couldn't get it again, which was the case with other contagious diseases like mumps, measles, smallpox and whooping cough.

            In his essay, Nathan laments the lack of knowledge the medical profession has about how contagion works. He says, “Contagion may be considered as the antecedent to all which follows its application and without it no effect would be produced.  But how this cause operates on the system, or on what part it makes its first impression, or how this first impression produces the ultimate effects, we are wholly ignorant.”

            By the time he was summoned to Dartmouth College, where there were 50 or 60 students sick with Typhus, Dr. Smith treated them and only one died. Possibly this was because of his “cutting edge” treatment, or because Dartmouth students were great candidates for surviving a serious disease. They were all young, and because they were mostly from well-to-do families, they would have been raised well-fed.   The fact that they were at college presupposes that they were healthy to begin with, because young men who were sick would not have been at school. 

            Nevertheless, by the time Typhus appeared at Dartmouth, Nathan had some definite ideas about how to treat it.  He admits that “I have never been satisfied that I have cut short a single case of typhus, but have been able to enable the patient to live through it more comfortably.  Like smallpox, measles and whooping cough, it must run its course.  Powerful medicines can make a person worse.”

            One of the medicines he listed was tartrite of antimony, which apparently contained some amount of potash.  This was used to make a patient throw up.  At the time, people believed that if you were sick, it was because your body was full of toxins, and if a doctor could cause you to lose bodily fluids, some of the toxins would be lost with the fluids, thus you would have less of them in your system. Medicine that makes people throw up is called an emetic.  If you threw up, you would lose some fluid and thus some of the toxin that was making you sick.  In his essay, Dr. Smith said that the only thing accomplished by giving a patient an emetic was to make him sicker.
 
            thumb lancet

 
            Another way doctors tried to get rid of the poison in a patients' systems is by bloodletting. Bloodletting, or bleeding the patient, involved making a cut in the patients forearm and letting some blood drain out.  Again, bleeding was viewed as a way to get some liquid out of a patient, and along with it, the poison that was making the patient sick. Often patients lost so much blood during bloodletting that the procedure weakened them enough to kill them. In their webpage Red Gold, the Epic Story of Blood, PBS reprinted the article “Bloodletting Over the Centuries” by Gilbert Siegworth, MD, first published in the New York State Journal of Medicine in 1980. In the article, Siegworth
describes how a thumb lancet was used to bleed a patient.  In using a thumb lancet for bloodletting, a practitioner followed a specific procedure. “ The arm of the patient was bound above the elbow with a broad tape tight enough to compress the vein, but not tight enough to diminish the arterial pulse. The blade of the lancet was grasped between the thumb and forefinger, and the hand was steadied by the other three fingers. The lancet was then introduced into the vein in an oblique direction until blood rose up at the point. The front edge of the lancet was then pulled up in as straight a line as possible to make the skin wound the same size as that in the vein. The thumb of the left hand which was compressing the vein distally was removed, and the blood was allowed to flow into a bowl for measurement. Care was taken to avoid transfixation of the vein, accidental arteriotomy, or injury to the nerve or tendon. The spurting blood was caught in various types of vessels. Barber's shaving bowls were sometimes used. (http://www.pbs.org/wnet/redgold/basics/bloodlettinghistory2.htm)
 
 

 In his “Medical and Surgical Memoirs”, Nathan doesn't say much one way or the other about bleeding the patient.  He writes that there are some symptoms that can be alleviated by bloodletting (when pain accompanies a sense of fullness in the head or chest).  He does not advocate bloodletting as a standard procedure when treating Typhus.

            He was definitely against blistering, which was yet another way doctors tried to get patients to lose fluid.  Doctors would apply poultices  - wet rags – dripping wet with scalding hot water onto a patients chest in order to burn them.  This would raise blisters and when the blisters broke, the patient would lose the fluid in the blisters and thus lose a little of the poison in their system.

            Nathan recommends giving the patient as much as he wants to drink, keep cool air in the sickroom by opening the windows when at all possible, and wet the patients bedsheets with water to bring the fever down.  This may not seem like cutting edge medicine, but these were revolutionary ideas at the dawn of the 19th century.  People believed it was dangerous to leave the windows open, and that night air was bad for you to breathe.  They believed that the “miasma” from swamps could come in through an open window and make you sick!

             I have read several biographies of Dr Nathan Smith that say that he believed in “watchful waiting” and emphasized the care and comfort of the patient.  I don't see that in his “Surgical and Medical Memoirs”.  In fact, mention of patient comfort is striking in its absence.  He cautions against using bloodletting as a standard procedure, absolutely does not believe in blistering, and thinks that emetics make the patient sicker. He believes that these things do not help the patient get better, and may very well make sickness worse. He never mentions that causing sick people to experience even more pain for no good reason is a terrible idea because burning them, cutting them and making them throw up makes them even more miserable than they already are.  He doesn't believe in performing these procedures because they may not help and may make people worse, and may cause people to die rather than get better.

            Nathan's focus was on survival, not patient comfort, not because he was heartless, cruel and uncaring but because he really couldn't afford to focus on what his patients were feeling.  He was a surgeon.  One of the focuses of his practice was surgery, and probably the most surgeries he performed were amputations, and he did them without anesthesia!  The only anesthesia available was whiskey.  By the time surgeries progressed, the patient either passed out or went into shock, which caused them to be somewhat senseless, but doctors in general and surgeons especially had to have a certain amount of callousness toward their patients' pain.

            Even when he wrote about “enabling his patients to live through Typhus more comfortably”, I wonder if he was really talking about lessened suffering.  He could have meant “by a comfortable margin”, meaning not snatching patients back from the brink of death by the skin of their teeth, but treating patients in a way that assures they will recover, where their survival is never in question. Other than that one comment, he never mentions the comfort of his patients.
            In 2014, we can look read Nathan's Medical and Surgical Memoirs and we know where he was right and where he was sadly wrong.  Neither bloodletting, blistering or emetics help patients get better, so he was right regarding all of that.  He was also right to treat Typhus fevers by keeping them hydrated and giving them plenty of fresh air and doing everything possible to bring their temperature down.     There are two types of Typhus, Typhus and Typhoid Fever.  They are both called Typhus because both diseases can cause delirium and temporary psychosis.  Typhus is carried by fleas or lice.  A person with Typhus has back pain, high fever, a rash, joint pains and severe headache and muscle pains.  Typhoid Fever is spread through the feces of an infected  person, and is usually contracted through contaminated water. People who have Typhoid Fever start with a low grade fever that gradually becomes worse.  Some Typhoid Fever patients can have severe diarrhea,  but others can be constipated.  Typhoid Fever can affect a patient's heart and lungs, and can cause severe delirium. I believe the Typhoid essay in Nathan's book addressed Typhoid Fever as opposed to the Typhus transmitted by fleas, because he comments on the diarrhea and constipation. Because of vastly improved sanitary practices and clean water supplies, Typhoid fever is very rare in modern America,