Robert Steavenson (1756-1828) was awarded Doctor of Medicine (from University of Edinburgh) and wrote a thesis in Latin about the medical uses of electricity. He was a member of the Medical Society of Edinburgh, 1776, and Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh, 1777. He bacame a physician at Newcastle Infirmary and took over the operation of a lunatic assylum renamed Belle Grove House in Spital Tongues,
"Among the first (if not actually the first) treatise published by an English medical man upon the employment of electricity in medicine, was written in Latin by Dr. Robert Steavenson,* of Newcastle-on-Tyne, for some years physician to the infirmary in that town, and great uncle to the present writer.
* Dissertatio Medica Inauguralis, de Electricitate et Operatione ejus in Morbis Curandis, Robertus Steavenson, A. M. Britannus, Edinburgi, MDCCLXXVIII [1778].
There is a copy of Robert Steavenson's thesis and an English translation from the Latin included in:
Electricity & Its Manner of Working in the Treatment of Disease. A Thesis for the M.D. Degree of the Univ. of Cambridge By William Edward Steavenson (1884).
"Before we bring this part of the dissertation to a close, it must be observed, that doctors seldom persevere in the use of electricity with sufficient diligence; for we ought not to forget that, though electricity removes some diseases all at once and as if by magic, still in others it must be used with long patience; and though the patient may have received no benefit from it after two or three months' use, still success is by no means to be despaired of; for it has removed, even after six months, diseases which could not be cured otherwise.* But Shenstone said, "Patience is a panacea; but where is it to be found, and who can swallow it?"
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