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Tuesday, December 5, 2017

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Alice Magaw (1860-1928) was an American nurse known for her work on anesthesia. Her innovations helped lead to major advances in modern surgery and earned her the title of the 'mother of anesthesia.'


Video Alice Magaw



Early life and education

Alice Magaw was born on November 9, 1860 in Coshocton, Ohio to Thomas and Nancy Elizabeth Magaw. In 1881, the Magaw family relocated to the Five Corners area of Rochester, Minnesota. Magaw attended the Women's Hospital School of Nursing in Chicago, Illinois from 1887 to 1889 with her friend Edith Graham and Edith's older sister, Dinah.

Magaw married Dr. George Kessel, a fifty-two-year-old widow with four children, on May 23, 1908. The Kessels lived in Cresco, Iowa. The Kessels separated in 1919.


Maps Alice Magaw



Career

After graduating from the Women's Hospital School of Nursing in 1889, Magaw worked as a private duty nurse in Chicago. In 1893, Magaw became the anesthetist for Drs. William J. and Charles H. Mayo at St. Mary's Hospital in Rochester, Minn., a position she held until 1908 when she married Dr. George Kessel. Magaw continued her anesthesia career delivering anesthetics to patient's at the Kessel Hospital in Cresco, Iowa, but returned to practice at the Mayo in the early 1920s after her separation from Dr. Kessel. Her delivery of fourteen thousand anesthetics without an anesthesia-related death established a record for the safety of the practice of anesthesia by nurses.


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Honors and awards

In 1899, Magaw became the first nurse anesthetist to be published when the Northwestern Lancet printed her article "Observations in Anesthesia." Five more articles would follow. Charles Mayo bestowed upon her the name "Mother of Anesthesia" for her mastery of open drop ether.

The American Association of Nurse Anesthetists (AANA) established the Alice Magaw Outstanding Clinical Practitioner Award (formally the Clinical Anesthesia Practitioner Award) in 1998 to honor Magaw. This award recognizes the accomplishments of CRNAs involved in direct patient care, who have made an important contribution to the advancement of nurse anesthesia practice.


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Publications

  • Magaw A. Observations in Anæsthesia, Northwestern Lancet. 1899;19: 207-10.
  • Magaw A. Observations on 1092 Cases of Anesthesia from Jan. 1, 1899 to Jan. 1, 1900. The St. Paul Medical Journal. 1900;2: 306-11.
  • Magaw A. A Report of 245 Cases of Anesthesia by Nitrous Oxide Gas and Ether. The St. Paul Medical Journal. 1901;3: 231-33.
  • Magaw A. Observations Drawn from an Experience of Eleven Thousand Anesthesias. Transactions of the Minnesota State Medical Association. 1904: 91-99.
  • Magaw A. A Review of Over Fourteen Thousand Surgical Anæsthesias. Surgery, Gynecology, and Obstetrics. 1906;3(6): 795-99.

surgery occurred during the 1940s due to the sheer number
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Death

Magaw died from complications of diabetes on February 17, 1928. After a funeral in Rochester and a private family funeral in Corunna, Michigan, Magaw was buried in the Pine Tree Cemetery in Corunna, Michigan.


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References

  • Nelson, Jeffrey E; Wilstead Steve F (Feb 2009). "Alice Magaw (Kessel): her life in and out of the operating room". AANA Journal. United States. 77 (1): 12-6. ISSN 0094-6354. PMID 19263823. 
  • Hunziker-Dean, J (Jun 1999). "Voice and touch: Florence Henderson on the skills of an ether specialist". AANA Journal. UNITED STATES. 67 (3): 263-4. ISSN 0094-6354. PMID 10488297. 
  • Koch, E (Feb 1999). "Alice Magaw and the great secret of open drop anesthesia". AANA Journal. UNITED STATES. 67 (1): 33-4. ISSN 0094-6354. PMID 10488272. 

Source of article : Wikipedia