Skin and Venereal Diseases, Volume 9

Couverture
Year Book Publishers., 1909
 

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Page 188 - No person duly authorized to practice physic or surgery, shall be allowed to disclose any information which he may have acquired in attending any patient, in a professional character, and which information was necessary to enable him to prescribe for such patient as a physician, or to do any act for him as a surgeon (id.
Page 184 - Fourth, senescence is at its maximum in the very young stages, and the rate of senescence diminishes with age.
Page 187 - ... no person duly authorized to practice physic or surgery shall be allowed to disclose any information which he may have acquired in attending any patient, in a professional character, and which information was necessary to enable him to prescribe for such patient as a physician, or to do any act for him, as a surgeon.
Page 176 - ... who are busy earning their daily bread and increasing the nation's wealth? It is a direct challenge. Without being a utilitarian, I insist that we must give a reason for the faith that is in us.
Page 151 - It is the adrenal secretion which, after absorbing oxygen from the pulmonary air, and being taken up by the red corpuscles, supplies the whole organism, including the blood, with its oxygen.
Page 160 - It is obvious that with all physiologically active substances the question of degree is largely determinative of the results produced by any agency that is capable of affecting the health. Most men, if they choose to smoke, can do so within certain limits without injuring their health; some men can exceed such limits with apparent impunity. The extent of the limitation must be determined by each man for himself, and if he is wise he will keep well within the border-line and will hold to his resolution.
Page 18 - ... examination of the nasal secretions will prove of value by permitting the recognition of the most dangerous type of the disease, and is therefore worth while even if it does not reveal all cases of the disease in those who come under observation.
Page 186 - Breakfast, 8.30 AM — Dry toast, one small piece — one or one and a half ounce — with butter; one soft, boiled egg, a small piece of whitefish ; three to five ounces of tea or coffee with cream and sugar, or an infusion of cocoa nibs, or milk and hot water, or cream and Seltzer. Sometimes oatmeal porridge is permissible, but not over three or four ounces should be taken. " Principal Meal, 1.30 or 2 p. M. — Fish, such as haddock or sole, or meat and pudding. Two courses only are allowed. No...
Page 207 - ... foreign countries, what can be expected of us as a nation a few generations hence? We, physicians, above all others, are best prepared to answer the query. It is not my purpose to institute Utopian plans, through or by which criminal abortion can be suppressed, still some suggestions may be in order. 1. The obligatory teaching of medical jurisprudence and medical ethics in its true sense in our medical colleges. This should be statutory, and medical examining boards should be empowered to enforce...
Page 188 - ... or advise his friends to write to the witnesses not to appear against him at his trial, and they write accordingly, 3 Inst.

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