| 1824 - 216 halaman
...appearance of deserving there." But this allegation is not well founded : for, the offices of a physician may continue to be highly useful to the patient, and...him, even in the last period of a fatal malady, by obviating despair, by alleviating pain, and by soothing mental anguish. To decline attendance, under... | |
| Michael Ryan - 1836 - 608 halaman
...appearance of deserving them." But this allegation is not well founded: for the offices of a physician may continue to be highly useful to the patient, and...him, even in the last period of a fatal malady, by obviating despair, by alleviating pain, and by soothing mental anguish. To decline attendance, under... | |
| College of Physicians of Philadelphia - 1846 - 478 halaman
...disturb the tranquillity of the most resigned in their last moments. 6. A physician is not to abandon a patient because the case is deemed incurable; for...him, even in the last period of a fatal malady, by obviating despair, by alleviating pain and other symptoms, and by soothing mental anguish. To decline... | |
| Karl Friedrich H. Marx - 1846 - 374 halaman
...appearance of deserving them. But this allegation is not well founded, for the offices of a physician may continue to be highly useful to the patient, and...him, even in the last period of a fatal malady, by obviating despair, by alleviating pain, and by soothing mental anguish. To decline attendance under... | |
| 1847 - 834 halaman
...tendency to discourage the patient and to depress his spirits. §5. — A physician ought not to abandon a patient because the case is deemed incurable ; for...him, even in the last period of a fatal malady, by obviating despair, by alleviating pain and other symptoms, and by soothing mental anguish. To decline... | |
| 1848 - 590 halaman
...to discourage the patient and to depress his spirits. • § 5. A physician ought not to abandon a patient because the case is deemed incurable ; for...liberality, that moral duty, which is independent of, nnd far superior to, all pecuniary consideration. § 6. Consultations should be promoted in difficult... | |
| Thomas Percival - 1849 - 214 halaman
...appearance of deserving them." But this allegation is not well founded ; for the offices of a Physician may continue to be highly useful to the patient and...him even in the last period of a fatal malady, by obviating despair, by alleviating pain, and by soothing mental anguish. To decline attendance under... | |
| College of Physicians of Philadelphia - 1851 - 570 halaman
...tendency to discourage the patient and to depress his spirits. § 5. A physician ought not to abandon a patient because the case is deemed incurable ; for...fatal malady, by alleviating pain and other symptoms, and'by soothing mental anguish. To decline attendance, under such circumstances, would be sacrificing... | |
| Alonzo Benjamin Palmer, Edmund Andrews, Zina Pitcher - 1854 - 592 halaman
...patient and to depress his spirits. SEC. 5. A physician ought not to abandon a patient because the cose is deemed incurable ; for his attendance may continue...under such circumstances, would be sacrificing to a fanciful delicacy and mistaken liberality, that moral duty, which is independent of and far superior... | |
| Indiana State Medical Association, Indiana State Medical Society - 1853 - 312 halaman
...tendency to discourage the patient and to depress his spirits. § 5. A physician ought not to abandon a patient because the case is deemed incurable; for...to be highly useful to the patient, and] comforting ta the relatives around him, even in the last period of a [fatal malady, by alleviating pain and other... | |
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