Leavenworth Medical Herald, Volume 21868 |
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Halaman 67
... cases to the New York Medical Journal : CASE I - Charles M'C- , aged nineteen , living at the St. Nicholas Hotel , between midnight and one A. M. of the morning of twenty - ninth of April last , waked and 10 Surgery . 67.
... cases to the New York Medical Journal : CASE I - Charles M'C- , aged nineteen , living at the St. Nicholas Hotel , between midnight and one A. M. of the morning of twenty - ninth of April last , waked and 10 Surgery . 67.
Halaman 73
... living a long way from my residence , it was almost morning before I reached the house . I found the little sufferer almost in articulo mortis ; speech , except in the faintest whisper , was impossible . The respiration was hurried and ...
... living a long way from my residence , it was almost morning before I reached the house . I found the little sufferer almost in articulo mortis ; speech , except in the faintest whisper , was impossible . The respiration was hurried and ...
Halaman 75
... application we can make . OBSTETRICS . A PLACENTA RETAINED 123 DAYS AFTER MISCARRIAGE IN A THREE MONTHS ' PREGNANCY . - Mrs . P. , aged forty , living with her husband , miscarried on December 3d , 1867 , 11 Obstetrics . 75.
... application we can make . OBSTETRICS . A PLACENTA RETAINED 123 DAYS AFTER MISCARRIAGE IN A THREE MONTHS ' PREGNANCY . - Mrs . P. , aged forty , living with her husband , miscarried on December 3d , 1867 , 11 Obstetrics . 75.
Halaman 85
... living who have not time to chew their food , and who , as a consequence , are compelled to shovel their dinners into their stomachs much as they do their coal into their cellars . Dr. Chambers unfortunately does not tell his readers ...
... living who have not time to chew their food , and who , as a consequence , are compelled to shovel their dinners into their stomachs much as they do their coal into their cellars . Dr. Chambers unfortunately does not tell his readers ...
Halaman 99
... LIVING AGE . The last number of this giant period- ical is on our table . If we were necessitated to read but one literary magazine , that one would undoubtedly be Littell's Liv- ing Age . Being published weekly , every thirteen numbers ...
... LIVING AGE . The last number of this giant period- ical is on our table . If we were necessitated to read but one literary magazine , that one would undoubtedly be Littell's Liv- ing Age . Being published weekly , every thirteen numbers ...
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Halaman 462 - There is no profession by the members of which eleemosynary services are more liberally dispensed than the medical, but justice requires that some limit should be placed to the performance of such good offices. 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...
Halaman 455 - 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...
Halaman 457 - ... and delay one of the parties, the physician who first arrives should wait for his associate a reasonable period, after which the consultation should be considered as postponed to a new appointment. If it be the attending physician who is present, he will of course...
Halaman 455 - ... 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...
Halaman 456 - ... retire to a private place for deliberation: and the one first in attendance should communicate the directions agreed upon to the patient or his friends, as well as any opinions which it may be thought proper to express. But no statement or discussion of it should take place before the patient...
Halaman 459 - ... inquiries should be instituted relative to the nature of the disease, or the remedies employed, but the topics of conversation should be as foreign to the case as circumstances will admit.
Halaman 448 - Secrecy and delicacy, when required by peculiar circumstances, should be strictly observed ; and the familiar and confidential intercourse to which physicians are admitted in their professional visits, should be used with discretion, and with the most scrupulous regard to fidelity and honor.
Halaman 452 - ... when he does receive them, he should never converse on the subject of his disease, as an observation may be made, without any intention of interference. which may destroy his confidence in the course he is pursuing, and induce him to neglect the directions prescribed to him. A patient should never send for a consulting physician without the express consent of his own medical attendant.
Halaman 453 - There is no profession, from the members of which greater purity of character, and a higher standard of moral excellence are required, than the medical ; and to attain such eminence, is a duty every physician owes alike to his profession and to his patients. It is due to the latter, as without it he cannot command their re.spect and confidence, and to both because no scientific attainments can compensate for the want of correct moral principles.
Halaman 454 - ... suffer such publications to be made; to invite laymen to be present at operations, to boast of cures and remedies, to adduce certificates of skill and success, or to perform any other similar acts. These are the ordinary practices of empirics, and are highly reprehensible in a regular physician.