Transactions, Volume 10Association, 1857 "List of members of the American Medical Association, by states, from its formation in 1846 to and including 1880. Compiled from the annual published minutes. By J. M. Toner, M.D.": 131 p. at end of v. 31. |
Dari dalam buku
Hasil 1-5 dari 100
Halaman 12
American Medical Association. SON , JOHN SHELBY , and JAMES OVERTON were made permanent members of the Association . The following list comprises the names of all delegates , permanent members , and members by invitation in attendance ...
American Medical Association. SON , JOHN SHELBY , and JAMES OVERTON were made permanent members of the Association . The following list comprises the names of all delegates , permanent members , and members by invitation in attendance ...
Halaman 16
... Association , De Witt Medical Society , WM . H. BYFORD , TALBOT BULLARD , CALVIN WEST , W. W. HITT , NATHAN JOHNSON . ISAAC MENDENHALL . T. K. EDMISTON , WM . A. HILLIS , J. H. LUCE , JAMES M. STEELE . E. K. CROTHERS . J. C. H. HOBBS ...
... Association , De Witt Medical Society , WM . H. BYFORD , TALBOT BULLARD , CALVIN WEST , W. W. HITT , NATHAN JOHNSON . ISAAC MENDENHALL . T. K. EDMISTON , WM . A. HILLIS , J. H. LUCE , JAMES M. STEELE . E. K. CROTHERS . J. C. H. HOBBS ...
Halaman 19
... Association , to which shall be referred all business of the Association on which an immediate vote is not required . Dr. JAS . MAURAN , of the Committee on Medical Topography and Epidemics for Rhode Island , being called for , the ...
... Association , to which shall be referred all business of the Association on which an immediate vote is not required . Dr. JAS . MAURAN , of the Committee on Medical Topography and Epidemics for Rhode Island , being called for , the ...
Halaman 33
... Association , by the Committees on Plans of Organization for State and County Medical Societies , were taken up and adopted . 1. Resolved , That the American Medical Association , appreciating the vast benefits to the advancement of ...
... Association , by the Committees on Plans of Organization for State and County Medical Societies , were taken up and adopted . 1. Resolved , That the American Medical Association , appreciating the vast benefits to the advancement of ...
Halaman 35
American Medical Association. ARTICLE III . Should specify who are to constitute members , the mode of their election ... Association appointed to receive them . Such reports are to be read either in full or by abstract at some meeting of ...
American Medical Association. ARTICLE III . Should specify who are to constitute members , the mode of their election ... Association appointed to receive them . Such reports are to be read either in full or by abstract at some meeting of ...
Edisi yang lain - Lihat semua
Istilah dan frasa umum
accident albumen ankle ankle-joint applied Association blood body bone broken Buffalo Hospital callus cause comminuted Committee Compound fracture counter-extension County crepitus deformity disease dislocation displaced double inclined plane dressed the limb EGESTA epidemic experiments extension feces femur fever fibula foot Fort Dallas Fort Vancouver frag ganglion gutta percha half an inch INGESTA Intestines John knee lateral splints left leg lower end lower third M. L. Simple malleolus Medical Society middle third months oblique observed occurred organism paste bandage patella patient perfect Philadelphia Phosphoric acid physician portion quantity of feces Result imperfect right leg seat of fracture shortened half shortened one inch side splints Simple fracture species starch straight splint surgeons thigh tibia tion transverse treatment trochanter typhoid typhoid fever ulcer upper fragment upper third Urea Uric acid walk Washington Territory Water extract Water Solids weeks Whole quantity York
Bagian yang populer
Halaman 613 - ... 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. Visits ought not, however, to be obtruded officiously ; as such unasked civility may give rise to embarrassment, or interfere with that choice on which confidence depends. But, if a distant member of the faculty, whose circumstances are affluent,...
Halaman 612 - It is also incumbent upon the faculty to be temperate in all things, for the practice of physic requires the unremitting exercise of a clear and vigorous understanding; and, on emergencies, for which no professional man should be unprepared, a steady hand, an acute eye, and an unclouded head may be essential to the well-being, and even to the life, of a fellow-creature.
Halaman 610 - The obedience of a patient to the prescriptions of his physician should be prompt and implicit. He should never permit his own crude opinions as to their fitness, to influence his attention to them. A failure in one particular may render an otherwise judicious treatment dangerous, and even fatal. This remark is equally applicable to diet, drink, and exercise. As patients become convalescent, they are very apt to suppose that the rules prescribed for them may be disregarded, and the consequence, but...
Halaman 612 - All practitioners of medicine, their wives, and their children while under the paternal care, are entitled to the gratuitous services of any one or more of the faculty residing near them, whose assistance may be desired.
Halaman 614 - ... which it may be thought proper to express. But no statement or discussion of it should take place before the patient or his friends, except in the presence of all the faculty attending, and by their common consent ; and no opinions or prorjiwslications should be delivered, which are not the result of previous deliberation and concurrence.
Halaman 608 - Frequent visits to the sick are in general requisite, since they enable the physician to arrive at a more perfect knowledge of the disease, to meet promptly every change which may occur, and also tend to preserve the confidence of the patient. But unnecessary visits are to be avoided, as they give useless anxiety to the patient, tend to diminish the authority of the physician, and render him liable to be suspected of interested motives.
Halaman 616 - ... character and standing of the practitioner in attendance; the practice of the latter, if necessary, should be justified as far as it can be, consistently with a conscientious regard for truth, and no hint or insinuation should be thrown out which could impair the confidence reposed in him, or affect his reputation. The consulting physician should also carefully refrain from any of those extraordinary attentions or assiduities, which are too often practised by the dishonest for the base purpose...
Halaman 613 - ... 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 to the physician who officiates. ART. IV. — Of the duties of physicians in regard to consultations. § 1. A regular medical education furnishes the...
Halaman 615 - ... deliberation in the consultation, or participation in the management of the case. § 9. As circumstances sometimes occur to render a special consultation desirable when the continued attendance of two physicians might be objectionable to the patient, the member of the faculty whose assistance is required in such cases, should sedulously guard against all future unsolicited attendance. As such consultations require an extraordinary portion both of time and attention, at least a double honorarium...
Halaman 609 - ... 7. The opportunity which a physician not unfrequently enjoys of promoting and strengthening the good resolutions of his patients, suffering under the consequences of vicious conduct, ought never to be neglected. His counsels, or even remonstrances, will give satisfaction, not offence, if they be proffered with politeness, and evince a genuine love of virtue, accompanied by a sincere interest in the welfare of the person to whom they are addressed.