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      The emergence of medical specialization in the nineteenth century.

      Bulletin of the history of medicine

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          Abstract

          This essay reexamines the nineteenth-century origins of medical specialization. It suggests that by the 1880s, specialization had become perceived as a necessity of medical science as a result of the realization of two preconditions: First, a new collective desire to expand medical knowledge prompted clinical researchers to specialize; only specialization, it was believed, permitted the rigorous observation of many cases. Second, administrative rationality suggested that one could best manage large populations through proper classification, gathering together individuals belonging to the same class and separating those belonging to different categories. Both of these conditions emerged first and most powerfully in early nineteenth-century Paris. They were, in contrast, uniquely underdeveloped in the fragmented medical community of London during this period.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Bull Hist Med
          Bulletin of the history of medicine
          0007-5140
          0007-5140
          2003
          : 77
          : 3
          Article
          S1086317603305368
          10.1353/bhm.2003.0150
          14523260
          a9c1d688-a1c9-45c5-bb61-07b5db26e284
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