Detroit Medical Journal, Volume 5Detroit Medical Journal Company, 1905 |
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Page 1
... physicians . While broad in its charity and true to its purpose to relieve the sick and suffering , it does not seek to do so at the expense of the physician , as so many of these charities do , but has manifest the most liberal policy ...
... physicians . While broad in its charity and true to its purpose to relieve the sick and suffering , it does not seek to do so at the expense of the physician , as so many of these charities do , but has manifest the most liberal policy ...
Page 27
... physicians are entitled to a pension when the physician suc- cumbed to infection acquired while in the public service fighting the epidemic . Dr. F. T. Wilson , who has just completed three years ' service as surgeon with the United ...
... physicians are entitled to a pension when the physician suc- cumbed to infection acquired while in the public service fighting the epidemic . Dr. F. T. Wilson , who has just completed three years ' service as surgeon with the United ...
Page 28
... physician , died at his home , 530 Twenty - third street , on March 21st . , after a short attack of pneumonia . Dr ... physician should be enlisted . It was organized and is being carried on by physicians and is doing work in which we ...
... physician , died at his home , 530 Twenty - third street , on March 21st . , after a short attack of pneumonia . Dr ... physician should be enlisted . It was organized and is being carried on by physicians and is doing work in which we ...
Page 36
... Physician for Diseases of Skin in University College Hospital , London , etc. In two large volumes ; third edition ; illustrated . Philadelphia : P. Blakiston's Sons & Co , 1905 . The Development of the Human Body . A Manual of Human ...
... Physician for Diseases of Skin in University College Hospital , London , etc. In two large volumes ; third edition ; illustrated . Philadelphia : P. Blakiston's Sons & Co , 1905 . The Development of the Human Body . A Manual of Human ...
Page 40
... physician and try to place ourselves in his coign of vantage before criticising his action . in withholding a patient from the specialist for a time . We must not forget that we are so constituted that we bear our neighbor's troubles ...
... physician and try to place ourselves in his coign of vantage before criticising his action . in withholding a patient from the specialist for a time . We must not forget that we are so constituted that we bear our neighbor's troubles ...
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abdominal acid acute adhesions arthritis bacillus bladder blood Board of Health body bowel cause cavity cent cervix Chicago chronic Clinical College colon condition contagious diseases cure Detroit DETROIT MEDICAL JOURNAL diabetes diagnosis digestion diphtheria edition examination experience fact fluid gall-bladder gall-stone gastric juice given glands glycosuria Grand Rapids Harper Hospital health officer hygiene hysterectomy illustrations important incision increase infection interesting intestinal joint June kidney laboratory lesions leucocytes Medicine ment method Michigan milk mucous muscle normal obstruction operation organs ovary pain pancreas Pathological patient peritonitis Petoskey Philadelphia physician physiology practice practitioner present profession Professor pulse recently rectum removed scarlet fever sepsis serum showed skin smegma sterile stomach surgeon Surgery surgical suture symptoms temperature text-book Therapeutics tion tissue treatment tube tuberculosis tumor typhoid fever ureter urine uterine uterus vagina volume wound yellow fever York
Popular passages
Page 328 - Ancemia logically, rationally and radically, for several substantial reasons: 1. Because it supplies the starving organism with the requisites for immediate reparation. 2. Because it needs no preparation or transformation at the hands of the vital machinery before it can be assimilated and converted into living force.
Page 323 - A MANUAL OF DISEASES OF INFANTS AND CHILDREN. — By JOHN RUHRAH, MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Baltimore.
Page 323 - THE PRINCIPLES OF BACTERIOLOGY. A practical manual for students and physicians. By AC Abbott, MD, Professor of Hygiene and Bacteriology, and Director of the Laboratory of Hygiene, University of Pennsylvania.
Page 106 - A. EDWARD DAVIS, AM, M. D., Professor of Diseases of the Eye in the New York Postgraduate Medical School; Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine.
Page 324 - A Text-Book of Practical Therapeutics, with Especial Reference to the Application of Remedial Measures to Disease and their Employment upon a Rational Basis. By Hobart Amory Hare, MD, B.
Page 291 - A Text-Book of the Practice of Medicine. By JAMES M. ANDERS, MD, PH. D., LL. D., Professor of the Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine, Medico-Chirurgical College, Philadelphia.
Page xv - This class includes tenosis of the external and internal os and all forms of dysmenorrhoea in which no anatomical changes can be demonstrated. He believes the coal-tar analgesics are of use as well as the preparations of iron and sodium salicylate. Other practitioners find that it is necessary, in many cases, to administer codeine in small doses, and antikamnia and codeine tablets would seem to have been especially prepared in its proportions for just these indications.
Page 291 - MANUAL OF CHEMISTRY. A Guide to Lectures and Laboratory Work for Beginners in Chemistry. A Text-Book specially adapted for Students of Medicine, Pharmacy and Dentistry. By W. Simon...
Page 172 - April 10 to 26, 1906. It is expected that it will be one of unusual importance, for a meeting which will be held in what has always been considered as an out of the way country. Already the titles of papers from some of the most distinguished men of the medical profession have been received.
Page xx - We meet with many cases in practice suffering intensely from pain, where for an idiosyncrasy or some other reason it is not advisable to give morphine or opium by the mouth or morphine hypodermically, but frequently these very cases take kindly to codeia, and when assisted by Antikamnia its action is all that could be desired.