The body of the crime | The dark history of the dissection of humans in medicine

En 1849, the faculty of the Ohio College of Medicine unanimously passed a staunch rule: “Students shall not divulge the secrets of the dissecting room or they shall lose the privilege of access therein.”

. Similar warnings were issued in the late 19th century by most medical schools in the United States. One had to be prudent if one wanted to continue with one of the fundamental practices in the training of future doctors. But why so much secrecy?

The reason is that anatomy professors, given the enormous increase in medical schools, had to sometimes move within the limits of the law to obtain the essential element in dissections: dead human bodies. They had tried to push for laws to allow bodies that were not claimed in hospitals to go to medical schools, but the supply was always less than the demand.

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