The Hygiene of transmissible diseases ; their causation, modes of dissemination, and methods of preventionW.B. Saunders, 1901 - 350 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 45
Page
Alexander Crever Abbott. MEDICAL LANE STANFORD OF 1 SEALAND SEMPER JUNIOR UNIVERSITY LIBRARY 1885 Gift Ir.Jens .Jensen LILE *** 1.
Alexander Crever Abbott. MEDICAL LANE STANFORD OF 1 SEALAND SEMPER JUNIOR UNIVERSITY LIBRARY 1885 Gift Ir.Jens .Jensen LILE *** 1.
Page 15
... medical and ecclesiastical writings are encountered laws for the sanitary guidance of man . It is due largely to the inculcation of these precepts , handed down from generation to generation , that we follow particular modes of living ...
... medical and ecclesiastical writings are encountered laws for the sanitary guidance of man . It is due largely to the inculcation of these precepts , handed down from generation to generation , that we follow particular modes of living ...
Page 17
... medical and ecclesiastical writings are encountered laws for the sanitary guidance of man . It is due largely to the inculcation of these precepts , handed down from generation to generation , that we follow particular modes of living ...
... medical and ecclesiastical writings are encountered laws for the sanitary guidance of man . It is due largely to the inculcation of these precepts , handed down from generation to generation , that we follow particular modes of living ...
Page 19
... medical interest . It is manifestly inadmissible longer to connect the teaching of hygiene with that of any other branch of medicine . It has become a science of itself , and as such should be in the hands of those who have undergone ...
... medical interest . It is manifestly inadmissible longer to connect the teaching of hygiene with that of any other branch of medicine . It has become a science of itself , and as such should be in the hands of those who have undergone ...
Page 21
... medical curiosities . During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the annual death - rate from this disease in London ranged from 2 to 4 per 1000 of population ; with the introduction of general vaccination it had fallen for the ...
... medical curiosities . During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the annual death - rate from this disease in London ranged from 2 to 4 per 1000 of population ; with the introduction of general vaccination it had fallen for the ...
Common terms and phrases
acute agents animals anthrax antitoxic appearance bacillus bacteria blood body bubonic plague carbolic acid cause cent CHART cholera clinical clothing common conspicuous contagious cultures death-rate deaths destroyed detected diphtheria disin disinfection dissemination dysentery Edition endemic epidemic erysipelas especially etiological fatal favorable formaldehyde frequently germicidal glanders Hospital hygiene immunity important individuals infection infectious diseases influence inoculation instance intestinal investigations isolated larvæ leprosy lesions less localities malarial fevers manifest Medical membrane methods micro-organism mode mortality mosquito mucous mucous membrane non-spore-forming observed occur octavo opinion ordinary organism outbreak parasite pathogenic pathological patient peculiar period persons Philadelphia plague poison polluted population practically predisposing present pyogenic quarantine rabies regarded sanitary saprophytic serum skin small-pox soil solution specific spores sputum stains steam suppuration susceptible syphilis temperature tetanus tion tissues transmission trustworthy tuberculosis typhoid fever usually vaccination virus vital water-supply worm wounds yellow fever
Popular passages
Page 352 - College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York; and Walter S. Haines, MD, Professor of Chemistry, Pharmacy, and Toxicology, Rush Medical College, in affiliation with the University of Chicago.