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Did your ancestor undergo surgery in the early 20th century? Explore this unique collection of of Registers of Anaesthetics from Britain, covering 1909 to 1911. These records record the administration of anaesthesia during surgical procedures at a time when modern operative medicine was becoming increasingly specialised. The registers typically note the patient’s name, age, date of operation, type of anaesthetic used, the surgeon responsible, and observations on the patient’s condition before, during, and after treatment.
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This collection of Registers of Anaesthetics from Britain, covering 1909 to 1911, records the administration of anaesthesia during surgical procedures at a time when modern operative medicine was becoming increasingly specialised. These registers typically note the patient’s name, age, date of operation, type of anaesthetic used, the surgeon responsible, and observations on the patient’s condition before, during, and after treatment.
By the early twentieth century, anaesthesia had become an established part of hospital practice, allowing surgeons to perform increasingly complex operations with greater precision and control. Ether, chloroform, and mixtures of both remained widely used, though medical practitioners continued to debate which offered the safest results. Anaesthetics were carefully monitored because complications such as respiratory failure, shock, or adverse reactions could still prove fatal. Detailed registers reflected a growing concern with clinical accountability, as hospitals increasingly documented each stage of treatment in order to improve outcomes and standardise practice.
These records also reflect a wider transformation in British medicine before the First World War. Hospitals were expanding, surgical specialisms were becoming more distinct, and the administration of anaesthesia was increasingly recognised as a skilled responsibility in its own right rather than simply an assistant’s task. As surgery became safer and more common, anaesthetic registers formed part of a broader culture of medical record-keeping that documented how scientific advances were reshaping patient care across Britain.

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