Proceedings, Band 16 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 16
Seite 33
... usually comprised in the commonly received work of that J. J. BURROUGHS , Chairman . name . To the President and Members of the Texas State Medical Association : Gentlemen - Your committee , to whom was referred the subject of ...
... usually comprised in the commonly received work of that J. J. BURROUGHS , Chairman . name . To the President and Members of the Texas State Medical Association : Gentlemen - Your committee , to whom was referred the subject of ...
Seite 67
... usually classed as continued fevers , nor are yellow fever and relapsing fever . Of these two last named fevers , it has never been my fortune to treat a case . YELLOW FEVER is admitted by all writers of the present day to be a fever of ...
... usually classed as continued fevers , nor are yellow fever and relapsing fever . Of these two last named fevers , it has never been my fortune to treat a case . YELLOW FEVER is admitted by all writers of the present day to be a fever of ...
Seite 82
... usually given is based upon the hypothesis , that it gives out its oxygen to the blood , in such a manner as to prevent cyanosis and to promote the solvibility of exudates of abnormal fibrine . For some years past— BENZOIC ACID has been ...
... usually given is based upon the hypothesis , that it gives out its oxygen to the blood , in such a manner as to prevent cyanosis and to promote the solvibility of exudates of abnormal fibrine . For some years past— BENZOIC ACID has been ...
Seite 91
... usually commence with a chill followed with high fever ; temperature running a high as 103 ° to 106 ° F. , when after the usual period of from three to five hours the sweating stage sets in , followed by the usual symptoms of simple ...
... usually commence with a chill followed with high fever ; temperature running a high as 103 ° to 106 ° F. , when after the usual period of from three to five hours the sweating stage sets in , followed by the usual symptoms of simple ...
Seite 92
... usually very poor with a loath- ing for most all kinds of food . The urine very high colored , charged with bile , acids , and sometimes a trace of albumen in it . The cheeks always flush when the temperature begins to rise and will ...
... usually very poor with a loath- ing for most all kinds of food . The urine very high colored , charged with bile , acids , and sometimes a trace of albumen in it . The cheeks always flush when the temperature begins to rise and will ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
A. P. Brown acid alcohol application ARTICLE attendance Austin Belton Board of Censors Board of Health bowels called canal Carbonate cartilage catarrhal cause Chairman Chloride chloroform chronic Cod Liver Oil Committee conjunctiva continued fevers cornea cyst discharge disease distichiasis District Clerk doses duty entropion examination eyes fact Fort Worth Free Sulphur Galveston give grafts grains granulations Houston hypodermically inch incision inflammation injection injury intestines Iron irritation jequirity labor Lampasas Larendon license ligature Magnesia MALTINE matter Medical Association meeting mineral waters mucous membrane operation organic pain paper patient periosteum physician practice of medicine practitioner preparation present President profession professional quinine remedy result salts Secretary SECTION Sour Lake Starley stomach stricture sulph Sulphate sutures symptoms syphilis temperature Texas State Medical tion tissue trachoma treatment Trichiasis typhoid fever ulceration urethra uterus vomiting W. J. Burt Waco wound
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 220 - ... require him temporarily to withdraw from his duties to his patients, and to request some of his professional brethren to officiate for him. Compliance with this request is an act of courtesy, which should always be performed with the utmost consideration for the interest and character of the family physician...
Seite 226 - Poverty, professional brotherhood, and certain of the public duties referred to in the first section of this article, 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.
Seite 222 - ... circumstances prevent the adoption of this course, it must be left to the patient to select the physician in whom he is most willing to confide. But as every physician relies...
Seite 214 - These obligations are the more deep and enduring, because there is no tribunal other than his own conscience to adjudge penalties for carelessness or neglect. Physicians should, therefore, minister to the sick with due impressions of the importance of their office; reflecting that the ease, the...
Seite 219 - ... others. For if such nostrum be of real efficacy, any concealment regarding it is inconsistent with beneficence and professional liberality ; and if mystery alone give it value and importance, such craft implies either disgraceful ignorance or fraudulent avarice. It is also reprehensible for Physicians to give certificates attesting the efficacy of patent or secret medicines, or in any way to promote the use of them.
Seite 215 - A physician should not be forward to make gloomy prognostications, because they savor of empiricism, by magnifying the importance of his services in the treatment or cure of the disease. But he should not fail, on proper occasions, to give to the friends of the patient timely notice of danger when it really occurs ; and even to the patient himself, if absolutely necessary.
Seite 220 - But if a member of the profession neglect his business in quest of pleasure and amusement, he cannot be considered as entitled to the advantages of the frequent and long-continued exercise of this fraternal courtesy, without awarding to the physician who officiates the fees arising from the discharge of his professional duties. In obstetrical and important surgical cases, which give rise to unusual fatigue, anxiety and responsibility, it is just that the fees accruing therefrom should be awarded...
Seite 225 - As good citizens, it is the duty of physicians to be ever vigilant for the welfare of the community, and to bear their part in sustaining its institutions and burdens...
Seite 226 - Medical men should also be always ready, when called on by the legally constituted authorities, to enlighten coroners' inquests and courts of justice on subjects strictly medical — such as involve questions relating to sanity, legitimacy, murder by...
Seite 214 - Physicians should, therefore, minister to the sick with due impressions of the importance of their office ; reflecting that the ease, the health, and the lives of those committed to their charge, depend on their skill, attention and fidelity.