Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Oshinsky injects life into history of Bellevue Hospital

- By Jenni Laidman Jenni Laidman is a freelancer.

A fault line lies across the history of Bellevue Hospital so that the rumble of major social trends, political history and, less surprising­ly, changes in scientific understand­ing create seismic waves that ripple through the iconic Manhattan hospital. In fact, when it comes to medical history, some of the waves begin at Bellevue.

David Oshinsky follows these many tremors in this deeply engrossing history, “Bellevue: Three Centuries of Medicine and Mayhem at America’s Most Storied Hospital.”

At its heart is the story of what happens when a hospital in America’s largest city welcomes everyone.

“They come knowing they won’t be turned away,” Oshinsky writes. “Every immigrant group has availed itself of Bellevue’s protective umbrella over the centuries; every disaster and epidemic has packed its Spartan wards.”

In its 300-year history, thousands of the humble and the famous (William S. Burroughs, Eugene O’Neill, Charlie Parker, Leadbelly, Saul Bellow, Allen Ginsberg, Norman Mailer, to name a few) have crowded its corridors. Hosts of medical students and doctors followed for the unrivaled experience of treating every kind of disease, accident and misfortune suffered by Bellevue’s patients.

Epidemic disease overflowed Bellevue’s wards in repeated waves — from yellow fever in the 1790s through AIDS in the 1980s and ’90s.

The Civil War filled Bellevue’s beds, depleted its medical staff and, ultimately, led to innovation­s we take for granted — ambulance service and profession­al nursing. Its doctors battled their own civil war as medicine moved from the idea that disease was spread by bad air — miasmas — to a knowledge of germs, and the grim truth that physicians were contributi­ng to the death of their patients. Prohibitio­n left its mark in the rising number of horrific poisonings — government mandated the inclusion of poison in industrial alcohol — and in the declining number of people seeking admission for alcohol problems.

In more recent decades, crack cocaine and the surge of homelessne­ss nearly overwhelme­d it. These were perhaps the hospital’s biggest threat until Superstorm Sandy overwhelme­d it, leading Bellevue to close its doors for the only time.

Oshinsky has wrestled an institutio­nal history of significan­t complexity into a compelling tale. Winner of the 2006 Pulitzer for “Polio: An American Story,” Oshinsky is a master of finding and relating memorable anecdotes to embody the history. The result is a serious story studded with juicy and occasional­ly bloodcurdl­ing bits from the past: physicians experiment­ing on the unknowing patients, rats frolicking in the wards, gruesome murder trials in which Bellevue’s forensic experts play roles in nailbiting whodunits. Oshinsky also tackles the more daunting aspects of the Bellevue story, such as the role and funding of public hospitals, a potentiall­y dry topic brought vividly to life through Bellevue’s repeated fights to thrive and, at times, to survive.

Bellevue’s role in medical history is not easily matched. Bellevue surgeons Andre Frederic Cournand and Dickinson Richards developed cardiac catheteriz­ation and shared the 1956 Nobel Prize in medicine for their work. Bellevue surgeon Frank Hasting Hamilton created the battlefiel­d surgical manual in the Civil War. Another Bellevue surgeon, Stephen Smith, launched the practice of public health and defeated Tammany Hall and its powerful Boss William Magear Tweed when he attacked the squalor of city tenements and their role in the spread of typhus.

But despite its role in the history of medicine and the country, Bellevue, above all things, has been a place for people with nowhere else to turn. “The patients it currently serves are every bit as poor and needy as the patients who preceded them in centuries past. And those with viable options almost always wind up going somewhere else,” Oshinsky writes. “That’s what makes Bellevue so comforting and so disquietin­g. It stands, for all its troubles, as a vital safety net, a place of caring and a place of last resort.”

 ??  ?? ‘Bellevue’ By David Oshinsky, Doubleday, 400 pages, $30
‘Bellevue’ By David Oshinsky, Doubleday, 400 pages, $30

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