{"title":"胡立亨,口腔外科医生","authors":"Edward C. Armbrecht D.D.S.","doi":"10.1016/S1072-3498(37)80131-4","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>The trend of the medical and dental professions toward an understanding of oral lesions, malformations, and diseases has progressed mainly because of vigorous research activities, supported by monies from appropriations, direct gifts, and endowment funds.</p><p>The dental school of today has a faculty composed of Doctors of Dental Surgery, Doctors of Medicine, and some members with both degrees; furthermore, the curriculum embraces several identical courses taught in the medical schools. Thus, the dental graduate of today not only understands the mechanics of dentistry, but he is also given a medical point of view, including the basic truths of modern scientific medicine. If you eliminate the craft of dental surgery and the mechanics of dentistry in a dental graduate's completed curriculum, you have remaining the science of medicine; to designate the latter dental medicine, must imply the practice of medicine through the dental profession. In the event he chooses to prepare himself for a specialty, he may take postgraduate study. However, if oral surgery is elected, then a hospital interneship will broaden his medical and surgical viewpoint. Professor Garretson of the University of Pennsylvania devoted his life establishing the field of oral surgery as a special branch, stating, “This specialty was that part of the medical and dental professions which overlapped.”</p><p>As early as 1839, the year when the first dental school was organized, Dr. S. P. Hullihen foresaw the necessity of an all-embracing medical, surgical and dental understanding: and by his professional career demonstrated that it was folly to attempt treatment of diseases of the mouth without appreciation of the complex mechanisms of the whole human organism.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":100711,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Orthodontia and Oral Surgery","volume":"23 7","pages":"Pages 711-739"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1937-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1016/S1072-3498(37)80131-4","citationCount":"3","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Hullihen, the oral surgeon\",\"authors\":\"Edward C. 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引用次数: 3
摘要
医学和牙科专业对口腔病变、畸形和疾病的理解的趋势取得了进展,这主要是因为在拨款、直接捐赠和捐赠基金的支持下,开展了积极的研究活动。今天的牙科学院有一个由牙科外科博士、医学博士和一些具有这两个学位的成员组成的教师队伍;此外,该课程还包括医学院教授的几门相同的课程。因此,今天的牙科毕业生不仅了解牙科力学,而且还被赋予医学观点,包括现代科学医学的基本真理。如果你在牙科毕业生完成的课程中去掉了牙科手术的技巧和牙科的力学,你就保留了医学的科学;要指定后一种牙科医学,必须暗示通过牙科专业实践医学。如果他选择为自己的专业做准备,他可以读研究生。然而,如果选择口腔外科,那么医院实习将拓宽他的医学和外科观点。宾夕法尼亚大学的Garretson教授毕生致力于将口腔外科作为一个特殊的分支,他说:“这个专业是医学和牙科专业重叠的一部分。”早在1839年,也就是第一所牙科学校成立的那一年,S. P. Hullihen医生就预见到对医学、外科和牙科全面了解的必要性,并通过他的职业生涯证明,不了解整个人体组织的复杂机制就试图治疗口腔疾病是愚蠢的。
The trend of the medical and dental professions toward an understanding of oral lesions, malformations, and diseases has progressed mainly because of vigorous research activities, supported by monies from appropriations, direct gifts, and endowment funds.
The dental school of today has a faculty composed of Doctors of Dental Surgery, Doctors of Medicine, and some members with both degrees; furthermore, the curriculum embraces several identical courses taught in the medical schools. Thus, the dental graduate of today not only understands the mechanics of dentistry, but he is also given a medical point of view, including the basic truths of modern scientific medicine. If you eliminate the craft of dental surgery and the mechanics of dentistry in a dental graduate's completed curriculum, you have remaining the science of medicine; to designate the latter dental medicine, must imply the practice of medicine through the dental profession. In the event he chooses to prepare himself for a specialty, he may take postgraduate study. However, if oral surgery is elected, then a hospital interneship will broaden his medical and surgical viewpoint. Professor Garretson of the University of Pennsylvania devoted his life establishing the field of oral surgery as a special branch, stating, “This specialty was that part of the medical and dental professions which overlapped.”
As early as 1839, the year when the first dental school was organized, Dr. S. P. Hullihen foresaw the necessity of an all-embracing medical, surgical and dental understanding: and by his professional career demonstrated that it was folly to attempt treatment of diseases of the mouth without appreciation of the complex mechanisms of the whole human organism.