The Hygiene of transmissible diseases ; their causation, modes of dissemination, and methods of preventionW.B. Saunders, 1901 - 350 pages |
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Page 46
... detect such constancy between density of population and death - rate , though the communities studied were embraced between the extremes represented by Hud- dersfield , with a population of 90,034 , a density of 8.6 persons per acre , a ...
... detect such constancy between density of population and death - rate , though the communities studied were embraced between the extremes represented by Hud- dersfield , with a population of 90,034 , a density of 8.6 persons per acre , a ...
Page 86
... detected , a result that might have been expected a priori , for by the time the analyses were made ( at about the end of the epidemic ) the organisms which had been present at the time of the pollu- tion , through which the battalion ...
... detected , a result that might have been expected a priori , for by the time the analyses were made ( at about the end of the epidemic ) the organisms which had been present at the time of the pollu- tion , through which the battalion ...
Page 103
... detect later than five days after death living cholera - spirilla in the body of a guinea - pig that had died of the experimental form of the disease ; and as a result of experiments performed in the Imperial Health Bureau at Berlin ...
... detect later than five days after death living cholera - spirilla in the body of a guinea - pig that had died of the experimental form of the disease ; and as a result of experiments performed in the Imperial Health Bureau at Berlin ...
Page 106
Alexander Crever Abbott. There is no doubt that all the organisms mentioned have been detected in dysentery ; but are they for this reason to be regarded as the primary cause of the disease ? If so , then manifestly dysentery cannot be ...
Alexander Crever Abbott. There is no doubt that all the organisms mentioned have been detected in dysentery ; but are they for this reason to be regarded as the primary cause of the disease ? If so , then manifestly dysentery cannot be ...
Page 107
... detected 4 times . On a number of occasions attention has been called by competent observers to the fact that amabæ , indistinguish- able from amaba coli , may be detected in the stools of healthy individuals . As a result of the study ...
... detected 4 times . On a number of occasions attention has been called by competent observers to the fact that amabæ , indistinguish- able from amaba coli , may be detected in the stools of healthy individuals . As a result of the study ...
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.