Peter Bade

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Peter Bade (born June 3, 1872 in Gremsmühlen , † April 23, 1956 in Malente-Gremsmühlen ) was a German doctor and orthopedist . He is one of the pioneers in scientific orthopedics.

Life

Peter Bade was the son of the hotelier Friedrich Bade (1831-1891) and his wife Anna, née Gradhandt, daughter of the surgeon Johann Gradhandt from Rostock . The father, who comes from a farming family based in Isernhagen near Hanover , bought an inn on Dieksee in Gremsmühlen in 1870 and expanded it into a flourishing hotel. Peter Bade attended school in Eutin and later the Katharineum in Lübeck . Due to his weak constitution, he was not accepted for military service in 1892.

Education

He studied medicine in Tübingen , Munich and Berlin . He was awarded a Dr. med. doctorate and passed the state examination in Munich in 1897. Due to a newspaper note, he applied to the North German Lloyd in Bremen as a ship's doctor . As such, he visited North America and Asia, including the then German colony of Qingdao . Bath later became an assistant to the surgeon Max Schede in Bonn . Through him, Bade got to know the still young X-ray technology . Due to a lack of protective measures, he suffered radiation damage during the X-ray examinations carried out over many years , which affected him from 1903 until the end of his life. He trained in this still young medical subject from Albert Hoffa in Würzburg , the cradle of orthopedics .

Activity in Hanover

In 1900 he founded a private orthopedic clinic on Sedanstrasse in Hanover. At the end of 1901 he also took over the voluntary specialist medical care of the Annastiftes , the former Krüppel-Heil-Anstalt . In 1901 he was one of the founding members of the German Orthopedic Society , of which he was temporarily president and whose history he published in 1939. During the First World War he worked as a hospital doctor until 1918, where he was responsible for the care of 19 hospitals . Bade was appointed as a Prussian state cripple doctor in 1921 . He finished his work at Annastift in 1923 and then devoted himself to his private clinic and research. After the clinic and house in Hanover were destroyed during the Second World War , Bade and his wife moved to his birthplace in Malente-Gremsmühlen in autumn 1943. He died there in April 1956.

family

In July 1900, Bade married Constanze, née Peipers, daughter of an engineer from Remscheid . The couple had a daughter and lived in Malente-Gremsmühlen in the Villa Bade from 1943 . A granddaughter of Bad's last lived in the villa. The vacant building was demolished in September 2017 and social housing is to be built in its place.

Honors

Bade was honored with the Prussian Crown Order IV class. He was an honorary member of the French Orthopedic Society . The Dr.-Peter-Bade-Promenade as part of the Dieksee-Promenade in Malente-Gremsmühlen was named after him.

Fonts (selection)

  • Rubber knot in the adult lungs , medical dissertation, Munich, 1896.
  • The development of the human skeleton up to birth. A radiographic study . In: Archive for microscopic anatomy 1899, 55, pp. 245–290.
  • Congenital hip dislocation , 1907.
  • Deformity of the lower extremity and coxa vara and coxa valga . In: Fritz Lange (Ed.): Textbook of Orthopedics , 1913.
  • What does the carer need to know about the cripple care? , 1922.
  • Brief description of the treatment technique for orthopedic illnesses , 1926.
  • The history of the German Orthopedic Society , 1939.
  • Hallux valgus , 1940.
  • Memories of an old orthopedist , 1946.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Dirk Böttcher , Klaus Mlynek , Waldemar R. Röhrbein , Hugo Thielen (eds.): Hannoversches Biographisches Lexikon . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche Verlagsgesellschaft, Hannover 2002, ISBN 3-87706-706-9 , p. 34 .
  2. ^ Villa Bade: Demolition has begun , Ostholsteiner Anzeiger , September 28, 2017, accessed on October 26, 2018.