The Sanitarian, Volume 50A. S. Barnes and Company, 1903 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 92
Page 5
... natural law all gases tend to diffuse themselves through each other , irrespective of their specific or relative gravity . The action of this law is promoted by the wind , but it operates even in confined places ; insomuch that in ...
... natural law all gases tend to diffuse themselves through each other , irrespective of their specific or relative gravity . The action of this law is promoted by the wind , but it operates even in confined places ; insomuch that in ...
Page 6
... natural tendency to rapidly permeate each other and become equally diffused is so great that the pol- luted air is ... nature . For besides constituting one - fifth of the bulk of the atmosphere and one - third of the bulk of water it ...
... natural tendency to rapidly permeate each other and become equally diffused is so great that the pol- luted air is ... nature . For besides constituting one - fifth of the bulk of the atmosphere and one - third of the bulk of water it ...
Page 8
... natural law of gaseous dif- fusion before referred to . The quantity of carbon dioxide thrown off by respiration , like the consumption of oxygen , varies according to circumstances . It is doubled in the same person in passing from 8 ...
... natural law of gaseous dif- fusion before referred to . The quantity of carbon dioxide thrown off by respiration , like the consumption of oxygen , varies according to circumstances . It is doubled in the same person in passing from 8 ...
Page 10
... nature of a volatile poison . Their chief conclusions are to the effect that ( 1 ) the immediate danger from breathing air highly vitiated by respiration arises from the excess of carbon dioxide and deficiency of oxygen , and not from ...
... nature of a volatile poison . Their chief conclusions are to the effect that ( 1 ) the immediate danger from breathing air highly vitiated by respiration arises from the excess of carbon dioxide and deficiency of oxygen , and not from ...
Page 11
... nature and quantity of the matters which give rise to them . Altogether the weight of evidence is that the quickly fatal effects of close and unventilated quarters is due to the excess of carbon dioxide and the diminition of oxygen ...
... nature and quantity of the matters which give rise to them . Altogether the weight of evidence is that the quickly fatal effects of close and unventilated quarters is due to the excess of carbon dioxide and the diminition of oxygen ...
Contents
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Common terms and phrases
alcohol American animals Association bacillus bacteria bacteriology Board of Health Bright's disease bronchitis cancer cause cent cholera Climate clinical colored consumption contagious danger Deaths from typhoid diagnosis diphtheria diphtheria and croup disinfection District dust epidemic fatal February germs Hospital Hygiene important increase infection infectious diseases infectious diseases reported influenza inoculation janitor lesions less lungs Marine Hospital Service measles Medical medicine meningitis method milk months mortality mucous membrane number of deaths organism patients persons physicians plague pneumonia Poisoning population practical prevalent prevent Public Health pulmonary Quarantine reported respiratory SANITARIAN Sanitary Sanitation scarlet fever serum Sewage sick smallpox theria tion Total number treatment tubercle tuberculosis typhoid fever uralite vaccination week whooping cough xlii xliii xliv xlix xlvi xlvii xvii xxii xxiv xxxi xxxiv xxxix xxxv xxxvii Yellow Fever York
Popular passages
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Page 165 - I, he produce satisfactory evidence that, after obtaining a registrable qualification, he has received practical instruction in a Laboratory or Laboratories, British or Foreign, approved by the...
Page 537 - ... cadaver. Successful candidates will be numbered according to their attainments on examination, and will be commissioned in the same order, as vacancies occur. Upon appointment the young officers are as a rule first assigned to duty at one of the large marine hospitals, as at Boston, New York, New Orleans, Chicago, or San Francisco. After four years' service Assistant Surgeons are entitled to examination for promotion to the grade of Passed Assistant Surgeon.
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Page 540 - AM, MD Professor of Clinical Medicine and Diseases of the Chest, College of Physicians and Surgeons (Medical Department of the Illinois State University), Chicago...
Page 350 - ... persons aged 65 years and over. Important causes of death were as follows: Tuberculosis of...
Page 537 - The remainder of the written exercise consists in examination in the various branches of medicine, surgery, and hygiene. The oral examination includes subjects of preliminary education, history, literature, and natural sciences. The clinical examination is conducted at a hospital...