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Electrical quackery

Electricity was long been regarded as something of an elemental life-force. After all, it could make disembodied frog's legs move as in Galvani's experiments. Mary Shelley's novel Frankenstein, published in 1818, reflected this impression by having Dr. Frankenstein's patchwork monster brought to life by electricity. This created great opportunity for both the deluded and the outright fraudulent to go into the field of quackery.

Table of contents
1 Perkins Patent Tractors
2 Electric belts and corsets
3 Electronic Reactions of Abrams
4 Other forms of technological quackery

Perkins Patent Tractors

In 1795, an American doctor from Connecticut named Elisha Perkins developed the Perkins Patent Tractors — a pair of rods, one made of iron and one made of brass, that purportedly drew out disease and pain by passing them over one's body. The Connecticut Medical Society loudly condemned the tractors as "delusive quackery," even by the medical standards of the time. But the tractors proved popular, and even George Washington bought a set.

Elisha Perkins died of yellow fever in an epidemic in 1799. His son Benjamin Perkins amassed a fortune with the tractors, as well as more conventional business ventures, before he died in 1810.

The practice of "tractoration," as it was known, did not live much longer than Benjamin Perkins. Attempts to use tractors in veterinary medicine failed, since animals tend to be more resistant to powers of suggestion than humans and have not the least faith in placebos. Two medical practitioners named Hygarth and Falconer administered the lethal blow to the practice by building duplicates made out of wood that proved every bit as effective.

Electric belts and corsets

The Perkins tractors were only faintly electrical in nature, but they led to further interesting medical technologies, such as electric belts and corsets, which incorporated batteries and were marketed as being able to cure a wide range of ills. They were used through the 19th century and into the 20th. As late as 1927 a California man named Gaylord Wilshire was using an AC-powered belt named the I-ON-A-CO.

Electronic Reactions of Abrams

Main article: Albert Abrams

In the years from World War I to 1924, Albert Abrams promoted "ERA", which stood for Electronic Reactions of Abrams. His theory was that electrons were the basic element of all life, and that he could diagnose, and later cure, diseases by analysis of blood. His work was debunked in 1923 and 1924, and after his death his machines were found to consist of nothing more than wires connected to lights and buzzers.

Other forms of technological quackery

New developments in science were quickly adapted to the field of questionable medicine. Magnets were used as elements in cure-all gear. When radium was discovered late in the 19th century it was actually incorporated into oral medicines, with documented cases of horrifying results.

The plausibility of electrical cures was enhanced by the fact that electrical machinery was being put into practical use in medicine at this time. Electrocautery machines proved much more effective than hot irons and other primitive cauterization tools, for example, and in the 20th century many other genuine medical electronic instruments were developed.





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