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  Vol. 138 No. 4, April 2003 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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On Being a Surgeon, or the Good Old Days of Surgery

Constance E. Putnam, PhD

Arch Surg. 2003;138:435-439.

The early US physician and medical educator, Nathan Smith, MD, was also—perhaps above all—a surgeon of considerable distinction. This brief look at the surgical side of his career presents some of the evidence for Smith's having been singled out so often as a seminal figure in early American medicine. For a number of years, the New England Surgical Society has presented to one of its members a Distinguished Service Award named to honor Nathan Smith. This article also provides insights into Smith's actual surgical practice. Here, readers can see how much surgery has changed while being reminded once again of what some important characteristics of outstanding surgeons are.


Dr Putnam is an independent scholar and medical historian in Concord, Mass.



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