Henri Albert Hartmann

Henri Albert Hartmann (16 June 1860 – 1 January 1952) was a French surgeon. He wrote numerous papers on a wide variety of subjects, ranging from war injuries to shoulder dislocations to gastrointestinal cancer. Hartmann is best known for Hartmann's operation, a two-stage colectomy he devised for colon cancer and diverticulitis.

Henri Hartmann in 1920

Hartmann Day

Hartmann Day

16 June each year

Hartmann Day celebrates the invention by Henri Albert Charles Antoine Hartmann (born 16 June 1860) of the surgical operation that is now known as the Hartmann Procedure that has saved many lives; also the work of those who have performed the operation and of those who have supported patients about to have, having, or have had the operation.

Instituted in 2021 to mark one hundred years since publication of the operation.

Hartmann Day card

In June 2022 a grateful patient sent a Hartmann Day card to the group of Stoma Nurses who had helped the patient.

The card was produced using a web-based facility that, for a fee, will print a custom greetings card and send it to a recipient.

The picture on the front of the card was the picture from this wikipedia page that had been electronically placed upon a blank electronic canvas of the correct size for the printing process. The greeting inside was the description of Hartmann Day as posted in this wikipedia page on 16 June 2021.

A tradition was started such that a Hartmann Day card does not include the name of the sender on the card, yet the name of the sender is either printed on the envelope or is written on the envelope before the card is inserted into the envelope. That way the recipient or recipients will know who sent the card yet can display the card without compromising medical confidentiality.

The sender also sent a second card to the sender, which the sender framed. Thus two cards were printed.

See also

References

  • Ronel D, Hardy M (2002). "Henri Albert Hartmann: Labor and discipline". Curr Surg. 59 (1): 59–64. doi:10.1016/S0149-7944(01)00572-4. PMID 16093106.


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