New England Medical Gazette: Monthly Journal of Homeopathic Medicine, Volume 37Medical gazettee pub., 1902 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 77
Page 10
... nature that the question whether they increase the risk of loss is for the jury On the other hand , there are con- ditions and diseases of a nature which requires it to be held , as matter of law , that a misrepresentation as to them is ...
... nature that the question whether they increase the risk of loss is for the jury On the other hand , there are con- ditions and diseases of a nature which requires it to be held , as matter of law , that a misrepresentation as to them is ...
Page 14
... natural law , it has withstood the tempests of opposition and persecution , and in the minds of many practitioners is a scientific fact and an invariable law . Humanity on every side cries out for a system which will cure by a safe and ...
... natural law , it has withstood the tempests of opposition and persecution , and in the minds of many practitioners is a scientific fact and an invariable law . Humanity on every side cries out for a system which will cure by a safe and ...
Page 17
... nature of the pustular discharge . While hot water at first produced intense aggravation it was followed by the most relief — as lotions of acetate of lead , carbolic acid , alcohol and boric acid did not in the slightest degree produce ...
... nature of the pustular discharge . While hot water at first produced intense aggravation it was followed by the most relief — as lotions of acetate of lead , carbolic acid , alcohol and boric acid did not in the slightest degree produce ...
Page 38
... nature , he makes a good surgeon . There is every reason that we should become specialists or not specialists , the people de- mand it . The field is so vast , that none of us can become perfect in everything . Some are versatile enough ...
... nature , he makes a good surgeon . There is every reason that we should become specialists or not specialists , the people de- mand it . The field is so vast , that none of us can become perfect in everything . Some are versatile enough ...
Page 40
... nature . It is said that it should be one of the functions of the general prac- titioner to choose the specialist to whom his patients should go . In point of fact , a man who needs treatment by a spe- cialist is afraid to go to his ...
... nature . It is said that it should be one of the functions of the general prac- titioner to choose the specialist to whom his patients should go . In point of fact , a man who needs treatment by a spe- cialist is afraid to go to his ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdominal acute Allard Alumni American anatomy antitoxin attention bacilli blood Board body Boston University Boston University School brain cause cent Chairman chalazion child chronic clinical College committee condition conjunctiva cough cure curette diagnosis diet diphtheria disease drugs eclampsia effect ENGLAND MEDICAL GAZETTE eruption examination fact feeble-minded fever frequently give given gout hemorrhage Herbert Moore homoeopathic hordeolum Hospital important infection insane Institute large number lingual tonsil Materia Medica Medical Journal meeting ment mental method milk month morphine muscles nerve nervous normal opathic operation organs Otis Clapp pain paper pathology patient person Philadelphia physician practice practitioner present Price profession pupil remedy rheumatism School of Medicine scientific Secretary skin smallpox specialist surgeon surgery surgical symptoms syphilis temperature therapeutics throat tion tissue treatment tuberculosis typhoid fever ulceration uric acid urine uterus vaccination York
Popular passages
Page 147 - A person duly authorized to practice physic or surgery, or a professional or registered nurse, shall not be allowed to disclose any information which he acquired in attending a patient in a professional capacity, and which was necessary to enable him to act in that capacity...
Page 553 - Professor of Diseases of Children in the College of Physicians and Surgeons (Columbia University), New York ; Attending Physician to the Babies...
Page 425 - The accepted definition of a homoeopathic physician is "one who adds to his knowledge of medicine a special knowledge of homoeopathic therapeutics and observes the law of similia. All that pertains to the great field of medical learning is his by tradition, by inheritance, by right.
Page 469 - Prof, of Pathology, Long Island College Hospital, Brooklyn, and Dr. Wharton Sinkler, Neurologist to the State Asylum for the Chronic Insane, Philadelphia. All papers to be in the hands of the chairman by or before December...
Page 80 - Jonathan Hutchinson, FRS, General Secretary of the New Sydenham Society, has requested Messrs. P. Blakiston's Son & Co., of Philadelphia, the American agents of the Society, to announce the publication of "An Atlas of Clinical Medicine, Surgery and Pathology...
Page 505 - PRACTICAL DIAGNOSIS. The Use of Symptoms and Physical Signs in the Diagnosis of Disease By HOBART AMORY HARE, MD, B. Sc., Professor of Therapeutics in the Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia; Physician to the Jefferson Medical College Hospital; Author of a Textbook of Practical Therapeutics.
Page 136 - LEGISLATURE has passed a bill which provides that the nature of alcoholic drinks and narcotics, and special instruction as to their effects upon the human system, in connection with the several divisions of the subject of physiology and hygiene...
Page 482 - The gentle flushing of the uterine cavity with the alkaline solution (iio°\ the reservoir containing the fluid being not more than two feet above the level of the hips. If the flushing could be continuously administered for a few hours (say two or three), the conditions would be more speedily reduced to normal, but the discomfort of the position of the patient (on a douche pan) prevents this, and a flushing once every two hours with one quart of solution is about the limit of treatment.
Page 414 - A peculiar and characteristic " stony " induration of the nearest lymphatic glands accompanies it, different from the general adenopathy that occurs later as a consequence of the systemic infection. Other lesions, as gummata, do not show it. 4. Chancre runs its full course in a few weeks, whilst tuberculosis takes months, and carcinoma even years, for its development.
Page 176 - Huddleston, all of whom are officials of the Health Department of New York City, and have had unusual opportunities for the study and treatment of this disease during the present epidemic. The work is to be in atlas form, similar to "Fox's Photographic Atlas of Skin Diseases,