CHRISTMAS, DICKENS, AND
MEDICINE
“God bless us, every
one”, the final words spoken by Tiny Tim in Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, still echo after over
150 years. It’s a tale of the power of Christmas to soften up a “squeezing,
wrenching, grasping, scraping, clutching, covetous old sinner” like Ebeneezer
Scrooge.
Tiny Tim, Bob Cratchit’s little son, has
aroused medical curiosity. He is depicted as small for his age and carried on
his father’s shoulder. He “bore a little crutch and had his limbs supported by
an iron frame”, and had a “withered little hand”. He often sits by himself and
“thinks the strangest things you ever heard”, though not irrational thoughts.
Tiny Tim on Bob Cratchit's shoulder (Wikipedia) |
What was wrong with
Tiny Tim? The story does not say but there was fluctuation in his weakness and eventually
the boy recovered. Donald W. Lewis, a pediatric neurologist, after ruling out
tuberculosis of the spine and rickets by events in the story, made a case for renal
tubular acidosis, favoring type I RTA. This disorder, by producing increased
body acidification leads to growth retardation, osteomalacia, bone pain and
pathologic fractures. A review of British pediatric texts of Dickens' time revealed
that general treatments for almost any illness included fresh air and sunshine,
a balanced diet, fish liver oils, and tonics for digestion. In Tim’s case
treatment for rickets or TB might have been added, and rickets was managed the
same way as scrofula. Such patients were believed to have an excess of acid and
received alkaline carbonates such as bicarbonate of soda or other carbonates.
This combination, especially the alkalinizing effect of bicarbonates, Dr. Lewis
believed, could have led to Tiny Tim’s recovery.
Medical problems pop up in much of Dickens’
fiction. (Someone even wrote a book about it.) Just
to mention a few, we read about the fat, lethargic boy Joe in the Pickwick
Papers, believed to have a “Pickwickian syndrome”. Other stories mention ataxic
gait, gout, erysipelas, typhoid, dwarfism, opium use, and additional problems.
Charles Dickens, Photo of George Herbert Watkins (Wikipedia) |
Children
populated many of his novels and he took great interest in their welfare. He castigated
child labor conditions at a time when children as young as seven worked in
mines and other dangerous jobs. In 1850 in London about one half of all deaths
were in children and yet there was no children’s hospital. Through the efforts
of Dr. Charles West, assisted by Dr. Henry Bence-Jones (of the myeloma protein)
and others, the Hospital for Sick Children went up in 1852 on Great Ormond
Street, London, in a mansion that previously housed Queen Anne’s physician, Dr.
Richard Mead, and his 100,000-volume library. Dickens raised funds for it by
public speaking and a reading of A
Christmas Carol.
The London of Dickens
was pretty filthy. Thick smog all but obliterated sunlight much of the time.
The gargantuan clouds of smoke pouring out from soft coal fires joined with
Thames Valley mist to darken the streets, irritate the eyes, and create havoc
for asthmatics. In poorer areas sanitation was almost absent and the Thames
itself was a depository of tons of sewage. It took the “great stink” of 1858 to
force members of Parliament, based on the Thames and literally holding
handkerchiefs over their noses, to pass a bill authorizing a citywide sewage
project. Housing was cramped, food often scarce, and water impure. People, including
children, often walked miles to work.
Dickens took an
interest in public health. He was an anti-contagionist, attributing diseases of
poverty to miasmas arising
Joseph Southwood-Smith (Wellcome Library) |
Dickens was also close to Thomas Wakley.
Wakley was a
combative surgeon, reformer, coroner, Member of Parliament, and editor
of Lancet at various times in his career. He used the Lancet as
a platform for reforming medicine and public health.
Thomas Wakley (Wikipedia) |
Dickens’ connections to medicine could go
on, but that’s enough for now. Good health to all,
HAPPY
HOLIDAYS
and A JOYOUS NEW YEAR.
SOURCES:
Hearn, Michael P., ed. The Annotated
Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens. 2004.
Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens. 2004.
Tomalin, Claire. Charles Dickens: A Life.
2011.
Flanders, Judith. The Victorian City: Everyday
Life in Dickens’
London. 2012.
Corton, Christine. London Fog: The Biography.
2015.
Cambridge, Nicholas. “From Mr. Pickwick to Tiny
Tim: Charles
Dickens and
Medicine”. Lecture at Gresham College. available
Lewis, Donald W. “What was wrong with Tiny Tim?” Am
J Dis
Child
1992; 146(12): 1403-7.
Eysell, Joanne. A Medical Companion to Dickens's Fiction. 2005.
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