Venus in the arms of mercury, bismuth and arsenic: Historical notes on gestational syphilis before penicillin

Authors

  • Georgiane Garabely Heil Vazquez PPGH/UFPR

Keywords:

gestation, syphilis, motherhood, disease, medicine

Abstract

The aim of this article was to discuss the knowledge and medical practices regarding to syphilis, especially gestational Syphilis, in the beginning of the 20th century. The aim goal is to present the medical debate that took place in one of the main medical schools of the country about the consequences of syphilis for the pregnant women and for the fetus or child. The natality was widely defended by doctors who eventually condemned some practices of women that would lead to compromise pregnancy. The methodology of analysis was established from a study case on the thesis defended in June 1913, in the chair of obstetric clinic, by the recently graduated physician Arnaldo Cavalcanti de Albuquerque. It was found by the documentation that the treatments for the period for gestational syphilis were still very precarious and the medical notes extrapoleted the clinical limits charging several times moral values.

Author Biography

Georgiane Garabely Heil Vazquez, PPGH/UFPR

Doutora em História pela Universidade Federal do Paraná. Pesquisadora vinculada ao grupo História da Assistência à saúde COC/FIOCRUZ- CNPq. Coordenadora Estadual do GT Estudos de Gênero ANPUH-Paraná.

Published

2018-04-30

Issue

Section

Articles