Materia Medica and Therapeutics (1884);[2] notes as attending physician during Benjamin Disraeli's final illness[3]
John Mitchell BruceCVOFRCPFRCPI (1846–1929) was a British physician, pathologist, and physiologist.[2][4]
Biography
After education at Aberdeen Grammar School, J. Mitchell Bruce matriculated at the University of Aberdeen, where he graduated MA in 1866. He studied medicine at the Middlesex Hospital, graduating MB (Lond.) in 1870. He undertook postgraduate study in pathology at Vienna and at London's Brown Animal Sanatory Institution under John Burdon-Sanderson and Edward Emanuel Klein. Bruce briefly held a junior appointment at Aberdeen Royal Infirmary before he was appointed in 1871 lecturer in physiology at Charing Cross Hospital. There he became in 1873 assistant physician, in 1882 full physician, and in 1904 consulting physician upon his retirement. He relinquished his physiological lectureship in 1877, taught materia medica from 1877 to 1890, and medicine from 1890 to 1901.[2]
Mitchell Bruce also conducted his own consulting practice for many years, which grew in size throughout his professional career. He was a relatively junior doctor when he attended his most famous patient, Benjamin Disraeli, first Earl of Beaconsfield, the former Prime Minister, in the last ten days of Disraeli's life, in April 1881.[4]
His best-known contribution to the medical profession was his publication, Materia Medica and Therapeutics (1884), of which 70,000 copies were sold during his lifetime. He was also an editor of The Practitioner, and an assistant editor of Sir Richard Quain's A Dictionary of Medicine (1882–94), writing the sections on 'heart disease' and 'acute and chronic rheumatism'.[4]
One of a notable group, with Burdon-Sanderson, Lauder Brunton, Ferrier, and Klein, Bruce laid the foundations in the seventies for that scientific development in physiology, pharmacology, and histology which was destined to prove so fruitful.[5]
^Leach, Doreen; Beckwith, Julie A. (2001). "Dr John Mitchell Bruce's Notes Relating to the Last Illness and Death of Benjamin Disraeli". Journal of Medical Biography. 9 (3): 161–166. doi:10.1177/096777200100900307. PMID11466517. S2CID39534001.