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Jacob Mendes Da Costa

American physician

Died when: 67 years 217 days (811 months)
Star Sign: Aquarius

 

Jacob Mendes Da Costa

Jacob Mendes Da Costa, or Jacob Mendez Da Costa (February 7, 1833, Saint Thomas, Danish Virgin Islands, Caribbean – September 12, 1900) was an American physician.

He is particularly known for discovering Da Costa's syndrome (also known as soldier's heart), an anxiety disorder combining effort fatigue, dyspnea, a sighing respiration, palpitation and sweating that he first observed in soldiers in the American Civil War and documented in an 1871 study.

He was born into the small community of Sephardi Jews on St.Thomas, then still a Danish colony.At the age of four, Da Costa left the island for mainland Europe, where he attended gymnasium.

As a result of his childhood travel and international education, Da Costa originally wanted to enter the foreign service.However, his mother encouraged him to attend medical school.

He applied to enter Jefferson Medical College (now Thomas Jefferson University) and earned his medical degree in 1852.During the Civil War he served as a physician at the Military Hospital as well as Turner's Lane Hospital, Philadelphia.

It was during this period that he gathered much of the evidence that used in his 1871 study of anxiety disorders.

He later taught at the Jefferson Medical College (now Thomas Jefferson University), where he became a respected and sought after lecturer.

Da Costa's interest in the humanities remained with him throughout his life.He believed that a truly gifted physician required a knowledge of both science and art.

In 1883, he told the graduating class of Jefferson Medical College that, I think that the cultivation of the humane letters has the most distinct bearing on the cultivation and appreciation of science.

Science is nothing without imagination; and imagination is most readily kept fresh by literature.What little good there is a mere descriptive person, and in the small facts which with painful toil he accumulates.

But let these facts be welded together by thought, their bearing traced by imagination, experiments devised by the mind projecting itself in advance of them, and the plodder is likely to become the great discoverer.

In 1860 he married Sarah Brinton, the sister of his friend and colleague, Professor John Hill Brinton (1832–1907).Their only son, Charles Frederick, became a lawyer.

He was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society in 1866.He died on September 12, 1900, and was buried at Woodlands Cemetery (photo: here).


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