The New Orleans Medical and Surgical Journal, Volume 4; Volumes 1847-1848S. Woodall, 1848 |
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Page 3
... means of information and knowledge of the topography and diseases of that region being too limited to speak with any degree of certainty , we are compelled to leave it to other hands . Before entering upon a description of the diseases ...
... means of information and knowledge of the topography and diseases of that region being too limited to speak with any degree of certainty , we are compelled to leave it to other hands . Before entering upon a description of the diseases ...
Page 10
... means be regarded as the pre- vailing disease of summer and autumn ; it more properly belongs to the winter and spring months ; yet , as the general tendency of the remittent is to the continued typhoid , taken in connection with those ...
... means be regarded as the pre- vailing disease of summer and autumn ; it more properly belongs to the winter and spring months ; yet , as the general tendency of the remittent is to the continued typhoid , taken in connection with those ...
Page 36
... means was the last thought of . I am now able to show at lecture , by an easy experiment , that fibrin is held in solution in the blood , that it passes limpid through the filter and then coagulates . The experiment can be made quite on ...
... means was the last thought of . I am now able to show at lecture , by an easy experiment , that fibrin is held in solution in the blood , that it passes limpid through the filter and then coagulates . The experiment can be made quite on ...
Page 41
... means of the air - pump . But the recent investigations of Magness , Bischoff and others , have settled the question in the affirmitive . But it is plain that these experiments of Sir C. Scudamore only prove that the evolution of ...
... means of the air - pump . But the recent investigations of Magness , Bischoff and others , have settled the question in the affirmitive . But it is plain that these experiments of Sir C. Scudamore only prove that the evolution of ...
Page 69
... means . Here , it is altogether different ; we have to do every thing ourselves , there being neither a sufficient number of authors nor competent assistants to render available the short and easy method of attaining literary ...
... means . Here , it is altogether different ; we have to do every thing ourselves , there being neither a sufficient number of authors nor competent assistants to render available the short and easy method of attaining literary ...
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action Alabama albumen animal animalcules appearance applied artery attack attended become bilious black-vomit blood body Boling bowels brain calomel carbonic acid cause character coagulation cold congestive fever continued convulsions death disease Doctor Lewis doses effects endosmose epidemic ether excited existence experiments fact fatal fibrine fluid force frequently functions heat Hospital imbibition inflammation influence Infusoria instances irritation Journal labor larynx liquid Malaria matter medicine membrane millimetres morbid mucous muscles muscular nature nerves nervous observed occurred operation opinion organs Orleans ovum oxygen pain paroxysm parturition patient peculiar phenomena physicians physiology placenta pneumonia poison portion practice present prevailed produced profession pulse quantity quinine reflex remarks remittent remittent fever respiration says skin solution spinal cord spinal marrow stomach substances surface symptoms temperature tion tissues treatment tube typhoid fever typhus uterine uterus vessels vomit yellow fever
Popular passages
Page 225 - But no one can be considered as a regular practitioner, or a fit associate in consultation, whose practice is based on an exclusive dogma, to the rejection of the accumulated experience of the profession, and of the aids actually furnished by anatomy, physiology, pathology, and organic chemistry.
Page 224 - Every individual, on entering the profession, as he becomes thereby entitled to all its privileges and immunities, incurs an obligation to exert his best abilities to maintain its dignity and honor, to exalt its standing, and to extend the bounds of its usefulness.
Page 222 - Frequent visits to the sick are in general requisite, since they enable the physician to arrive at a more perfect knowledge of the disease — -to meet promptly every change which may occur, and also tend to preserve the confidence of the patient. But unnecessary visits are to be avoided, as they give useless anxiety to the patient, tend to diminish the authority of the physician, and render him liable to be suspected of interested motives.
Page 226 - ... 9. As circumstances sometimes occur to render a special consultation desirable, when the continued attendance of two physicians might be objectionable to the patient, the member of the faculty whose assistance is required in such cases, should sedulously guard against all future unsolicited attendance. As such consultations require an extraordinary portion both of time and attention, at least a double honorarium may be reasonably expected.
Page 222 - The opportunity which a physician not unfrequently enjoys of promoting and strengthening the good resolutions of his patients, suffering under the consequences of vicious conduct, ought never to be neglected.
Page 227 - ... than is absolutely necessary with the general plan of treatment ; to assume no future direction, unless it be expressly desired ; and, in this last case, to request an immediate consultation with the practitioner previously employed.
Page 228 - DUTIES OF THE PROFESSION TO THE PUBLIC, AND OF THE OBLIGATIONS OF THE PUBLIC TO THE PROFESSION. ART. I. — Duties of the profession to the public. § 1. As good citizens, it is the duty of physicians to be ever vigilant for the welfare of the community, and to bear their part in sustaining its institutions and burdens...
Page 227 - A physician ought not to take charge of or prescribe for a patient who has recently been under the care of another member of the faculty in the same illness, except in cases of sudden emergency, or in consultation with the physician previously in attendance, or when the latter has relinquished the case or been regularly notified that his services are no longer desired.
Page 127 - Each State, county and district medical society entitled to representation shall have the privilege of sending to the Association one delegate for every ten of its regular resident members, and one for every additional fraction of more than half that number...
Page 223 - A patient should, if possible, avoid even the friendly visits of a physician who is not attending him • — and when he does receive them, he should never converse on the subject of his disease, as an observation may be made, without any intention of interference, which may destroy his confidence in the course he is pursuing, and induce him to neglect the directions prescribed to him.