The Richmond and Louisville Medical Journal, 第 8 巻E.S. Gaillard, 1868 |
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acetabulum action amputation Andersonville applied army Atropine attended Bell blood bloodletting body bone calabar bean carbolic acid cause cent cervix character chloroform clinical condition Confederate constitutional corpuscles cure deaths dilatation disease doses drachms duty editor effect ergot examination fact Federal femur fever fluid fluid ounces gangrene give globules glycerine hæmorrhage hospital inches incision injection injury iodine knife labor lecture less ligament Louisville matter Medical Association Medical College Medical Journal Medical Society medicine membrane ment months morphia muscles Mussey observed operation organs ounces pain pathology patient period Philadelphia physician physiology pneumonia portion practice practitioner present prisoners Prof profession professional Professor published purulent regard remedy removed reports result skin spermatorrhoea strychnia student success suppuration surface surgeons Surgery surgical symptoms tetanus tion tissues treated treatment tumor typhoid fever urethra uterus wounds writer
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157 ページ - ... association, and who is in good moral and professional standing in the place in which he resides, should be fastidiously excluded from fellowship, or his aid refused in consultation, when it is requested by the patient.
163 ページ - ... should always be recognized as presenting valid claims for gratuitous services ; but neither institutions endowed by the public or by rich individuals, societies for mutual benefit, for the insurance of lives or for analogous purposes, nor any profession or occupation, can be admitted to possess such privilege.
161 ページ - ... 8. A physician, when visiting a sick person in the country may be desired to see a neighboring patient who is under the regular direction of another physician, in consequence of some sudden change or aggravation of symptoms. The conduct to be pursued on such an occasion is to give advice adapted to present circumstances; to interfere no...
151 ページ - For the physician should be the minister of hope and comfort to the sick, that, by such cordials to the drooping spirit, he may smooth the bed of death, revive expiring life, and counteract the depressing influence of those maladies which often disturb the tranquility of the most resigned in their last moments.
156 ページ - ... experiences at the sickness of a wife, a child, or any one, who by the ties of consanguinity, is rendered peculiarly dear to him, tend to obscure his judgment, and produce timidity- and irresolution in his practice. Under such circumstances, medical men are peculiarly dependent upon each other, and kind offices and professional aid should always -be cheerfully and gratuitously afforded.
157 ページ - A regular medical education furnishes the only presumptive evidence of professional abilities and acquirements, and Ought to be the only acknowledged right of an individual to the exercise and honors of his profession. Nevertheless, as in consultations the good of the patient is the sole object in view...
160 ページ - ... any course of conduct pursued that may directly or indirectly tend to diminish the trust reposed in the physician employed.
158 ページ - But such variation and the reasons for it ought to be carefully detailed at the next meeting in consultation. The same privilege belongs also to the consulting physician if he is sent for in an emergency, when the regular attendant is out of the way, and similar explanations must be made by him, at the next consultation.
80 ページ - A Treatise on Human Physiology : designed for the use of Students and Practitioners of Medicine. By JOHN C. DALTON, MD, Professor of Physiology and Hygiene in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York.
161 ページ - A wealthy physician should not give advice gratis to the affluent ; because his doing so is an injury to his professional brethren. The office of a physician can never be supported as an exclusively beneficent one ; and it is defrauding, in some degree, the common funds for its support, when fees are dispensed with which might justly be claimed.