Sir
William Macewen
(1848-1924)
Born
on the Isle of Bute, Scotland, in 1848 Macewen qualified MB,
CM from the University of Glasgow in 1869 and MD in 1872. He
has often been named as the greatest innovative surgeon ever
to have graduated from the Glasgow School of Medicine. He was
appointed surgeon to the Western Infirmary in 1873 and to the
Royal Infirmary in 1877 and it was in these hospitals that he
developed his revolutionary aseptic practices.
A former student of Lister, Macewen was one of a number of surgeons
who sought to take Listers work further by trying to achieve
asceptic (germ-free) conditions in the operating theatre. His
successful aseptic practices subsequently led to him becoming
a pioneer of surgery of the brain and spine.
Macewen
developed an aseptic ritual in the operating theatre
insisting that his assistants and staff scrubbed up thoroughly
before surgery. He replaced the overcoats normally worn by medical
staff during operations at the time to protect their clothing
with sterilisable white coats. He also ensured that surgical
instruments, dressings and everything else in the theatre which
might be a source of infection was sterilised.
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