Abstract

ObjectiveDiagnosing disease from the past using historic textual sources can be controversial as to its accuracy. To overcome these objections, an empirical approach to the historical clinical data was developed. The approach follows a standardised, objective, and systematic evaluation, satisfying the requirements of the philosophy of science. MaterialPhysician-managed medical records of mid-19th century patients reported to have suffered from tuberculosis. MethodA diagnostic algorithm, quantifying clinical data into a scoring system, was developed based on criteria recorded in the medical sources. The findings were compared to the autopsy results using the Receiver Operating Characteristics method. ResultsThe generated scoring system correctly predicted the diagnosis of tuberculosis in 86% of patients in the study. 6% false negatives and 8% false positives were predicted. ConclusionsIt is possible to retrospectively diagnose in a reliable and scientifically robust manner under certain conditions. It is important to embed the clinical data into the historical context. A general rejection of retrospective diagnosis is unsubstantiated. Well-designed, disease-specific, and source adapted medical scoring systems are new approaches and overcome criticism raised against retrospective diagnosis. SignificanceThis new approach utilises diverse historic sources and potentially leads to reliable retrospective diagnosis of most common diseases of the past. LimitationsSelection bias of the records allocated. Quality of the historic sources utilized. Restricted statistical assessment potential of historic sources. Suggestions for further researchDevelopment of disease- and epoch-specific medical score systems.

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