The surgeon Henry Marsh picks 'the saviour of mothers' Dr Semmelweis

The surgeon Henry Marsh picks 'the saviour of mothers' Dr Semmelweis

Author: BBC Radio 4 September 2, 2024 Duration: 27:44

The biography show where famous guests pick someone from history they admire or they love. Our only rule is they must be dead. Today neurosurgeon Dr Henry Marsh chooses “the saviour of mothers” Dr Ignaz Semmelweis The Hungarian doctor discovered the link between childbirth and puerperal fever in 19th century Vienna but he was ridiculed, ignored and demoted as his discovery challenged the medical orthodoxy. Post-mortems at the time were carried out by doctors before they practised on wards, with no hygiene step between the two. Semmelweis recommended handwashing for doctors, and gathered statistics to prove his theory.

Despite the evidence, the medical establishment was resistant to change and Semmelweis became increasingly traumatised, frustrated and angry. In his final months, he seems to have also developed an organic brain disorder which led to his friends and wife having him restrained and sectioned in a mental asylum where he subsequently died from injuries. Nominator Dr Henry Marsh is the author of Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death and Brain Surgery. With the playwright Stephen Brown who cowrote Dr Semmelweis with Sir Mark Rylance. Presented by Matthew Parris and produced for BBC Studios Audio by Ellie Richold


Some voices become so familiar they feel like companions, and the conversations on Great Lives from BBC Radio 4 have that quality. It’s less a formal history lesson and more a series of intimate, revealing portraits, shaped by the personal choices of a different guest each time. These guests-ranging from acclaimed artists and scientists to politicians and writers-bring forward the figure who has profoundly shaped their own path, whether that’s a towering historical icon or a quieter, overlooked genius. What you’ll hear is a genuine discussion, often surprising and always deeply human, as host and guest piece together a life from the facts, the myths, and the enduring legacy. The magic of this podcast lies in that dual perspective: you learn about an extraordinary subject, but you also get a glimpse into what moves the person choosing them. It’s a documentary series that lives in the specific details of individual experience, connecting the personal to the historical. Tune in for thoughtful, well-researched conversations that explore how a single life can ripple through culture, society, and the individuals who come after, reminding us that biography is never just about the past.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

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