The Detroit Lancet, Volume 4Leartus Connor, Henry Alexander Cleland E.B. Smith & Company, 1881 |
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Common terms and phrases
abdominal abscess acid action acute artery Association asylums blood Board of Health body bone bowels brain Bright's disease catarrh cause cavity cervix child chloroform chronic cicatrix clinical color committee condition cornea course cure Detroit diagnosis diphtheria disease doctor doses effect examination fact fever fluid forceps fracture give glands hemorrhage Hospital increased inflammation injected insane irritation Jour kidney labor Lancet larynx lesion limb liver lungs matter Medical College medicine ment mucous membrane muscles nerve nervous observed occur operation organs pain paper passed patient pepsine peritoneal persons pharynx physician poison practice present produced Prof profession pulse quinine remedies says side skin Society stomach suffering surgeon surgery surgical symptoms syphilis temperature theria tion tissue treat treatment tumor typhoid typhoid fever urea urethra urine uterine uterus vomiting weeks wound writer's cramp York
Popular passages
Page 353 - It is better, on this account, in graduating the bottle, to make two scratches as represented in the drawing, one at the top and the other at the bottom of the curve : this prevents any future mistake.
Page 28 - In the four quarters of the globe, who reads an American book, or goes to an American play, or looks at an American picture or statue...
Page 556 - Resolved, That the President be authorized to appoint a committee of five to digest and report in detail as soon as practicable upon the time, place, and terms of the publication of such a journal, to elect an editor, fix his salary, and to arrange all other necessary details.
Page 453 - The time occupied in the regular courses or sessions from which students are graduated shall not be less than five months, or twenty weeks, each. (2) Two full courses of lectures, not within one and the same year of time, shall be required for graduation with the degree of doctor of medicine.
Page 562 - It is not in accord with the interests of the public or the honor of the profession that any physician or medical teacher should examine or sign diplomas or certificates of proficiency for, or otherwise be specially concerned with, the graduation of persons whom they have good reason to believe intend to support and practice any exclusive and irregular system of medicine.
Page 459 - Each local society shall have the privilege of sending to the association one delegate for every ten of its regular resident members, and one for every additional fraction of more than half of this number.
Page 33 - Army; JH Warren, of Massachusetts; and AT Woodward, of Vermont." The committee recommended that the next meeting of the Association be held in the city of Richmond, Va., on the first Tuesday in May, 1881.
Page 433 - Such dead body shall not be so shipped or delivered as aforesaid if it shall be requested in good faith for interment by any relative before the same shall be shipped as aforesaid, and in case the dead body of any person so delivered or shipped as aforesaid, be subsequently claimed or demanded of...
Page 555 - The same when finally adopted to be added at the end and to constitute a part of said Paragraph 1, of Article 1. The proposed addition is in these words : " and hence it is considered derogatory to the interests of the public and the honor of the profession for any physician or teacher to aid, in any way, the medical teaching or graduation of persons knowing them to be supporters and intended practitioners of some irregular and exclusive system of medicine.
Page 453 - A thorough examination in the branches of a good English education, including mathematics, English composition and elementary physics, or natural philosophy.