The Annual medical directory of regular physicians in the State of Illinois v.2, 1878, 2±Ç1878 |
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... medicines in this shape , accurately weighed and ready for admin- istering , has long been recognized . We also offer a line of Granules consisting of Rhubarb , Ipecac , Opium , Camphor , and other simple agents , in such minute ...
... medicines in this shape , accurately weighed and ready for admin- istering , has long been recognized . We also offer a line of Granules consisting of Rhubarb , Ipecac , Opium , Camphor , and other simple agents , in such minute ...
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... Medicine , published by Geo . S. Davis , Detroit , Mich . Subscrip- tion price for the year 1878 , 25 cents , which enclose to the publisher , at above address ( P. Ò . Box 641 ) . BERBERIS AQUIFOLIUM - Fluid Extract . From the Rocky ...
... Medicine , published by Geo . S. Davis , Detroit , Mich . Subscrip- tion price for the year 1878 , 25 cents , which enclose to the publisher , at above address ( P. Ò . Box 641 ) . BERBERIS AQUIFOLIUM - Fluid Extract . From the Rocky ...
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... MEDICINE . REV . HOWARD CROSBY , D.D. , LL.D. , Chancellor of the University . ALFRED C. POST , M.D. , LL.D. , Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery ; President of the Faculty . CHARLES INSLEE PARDEE , M.D. , Pro- fessor of Diseases of ...
... MEDICINE . REV . HOWARD CROSBY , D.D. , LL.D. , Chancellor of the University . ALFRED C. POST , M.D. , LL.D. , Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery ; President of the Faculty . CHARLES INSLEE PARDEE , M.D. , Pro- fessor of Diseases of ...
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... MEDICINE . MATTHEW HENRY BUCKHAM , A. M. , D.D. , Burlington , Vt . , President . SAMUEL WHITE THAYER . M. D .. LL.D. , Burlington , Vt . , Emeritus Professor of Gen- eral and Special Anatomy , Consulting Sur- geon to Mary Fletcher ...
... MEDICINE . MATTHEW HENRY BUCKHAM , A. M. , D.D. , Burlington , Vt . , President . SAMUEL WHITE THAYER . M. D .. LL.D. , Burlington , Vt . , Emeritus Professor of Gen- eral and Special Anatomy , Consulting Sur- geon to Mary Fletcher ...
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... Association . 3 Illinois State Medical Society . 15 Chicago Society of Physicians and Surgeons . 16 Chicago Medical Society . 17 Chicago Medico - Historical Society . LAWS OF 1877 , REGULATING THE PRACTICE OF MEDICINE AND.
... Association . 3 Illinois State Medical Society . 15 Chicago Society of Physicians and Surgeons . 16 Chicago Medical Society . 17 Chicago Medico - Historical Society . LAWS OF 1877 , REGULATING THE PRACTICE OF MEDICINE AND.
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12 Southern Illinois 28 Macoupin County American Medical Association Bellevue Bennett Ec Bloomington Board of Health Castleton Central Illinois Medical certificate Champaign Charles Chas Chicago M. C. City Clark Cook County Medical Society Decatur disease Farmer City Grove Hahnemann M. C. Hancock County Henry Homeo Hospital Illinois Medical Association Illinois Medical Society Illinois State Medical insane Jacksonville James Jefferson Jerseyville John Kankakee Keokuk LaSalle Louis M. C. Louisville Macoupin County Macoupin County Medical Madison Marshall McLean County medicine Miami M. C. Military Tract Medical Morgan County Number of members Officers for 1877-78-President Ohio patient Peoria Peoria County PEPSIN person Phosphorus Pike Co Pills Podophyllin practice profession Professor Pulv Quincy QUININE Randolph Robt Rock Island Rush M. C. Samuel Sangamon Secretary Society of Central Southern Illinois Medical Springfield Stephenson County Strychnia SULPHATE Thomas Tract Medical Society Univ Wabash ave William York
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101 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... to all its privileges and immunities, incurs an obligation to exert his best abilities to maintain its dignity and honor, to exalt its standing, and to extend the bounds of its usefulness. He should therefore observe strictly, such laws as are instituted for the government of its members; should avoid all contumelious and sarcastic remarks relative to the faculty, as a body; and while, by unwearied diligence, he resorts to every honorable means of enriching the science, he should entertain a...
102 ÆäÀÌÁö - A regular medical education furnishes the only presumptive evidence of professional abilities and acquirements, and ought to be the only acknowledged right of an individual to the exercise and honors of his profession. Nevertheless, as in consultations the good of the patient is the sole object in view...
102 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... may be desired. A physician afflicted with disease is usually an incompetent judge of his own case; and the natural anxiety and solicitude which he experiences at the sickness of a wife, a child, or any one who, by the ties of consanguinity, is rendered peculiarly dear to him, 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...
106 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... the profession, are so numerous and important, that physicians are justly entitled to the utmost consideration and respect from the community. The public ought likewise to entertain a just appreciation of medical qualifications; to make a proper discrimination between true science and the assumptions of ignorance and empiricism — to afford every encouragement and facility for the acquisition of medical education...
99 ÆäÀÌÁö - The obligation of secrecy extends beyond the period of professional services; none of the privacies of personal and domestic life, no infirmity of disposition, or flaw of character, observed during professional attendance, should ever be divulged by the physician, except when he is imperatively required to do so.
104 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... the want of success, in the first stage of treatment, affords no evidence of a lack of professional knowledge and skill. ^ 5. When a physician is called to an urgent...
106 ÆäÀÌÁö - It is the duty of physicians, who are frequent witnesses of the enormities committed by quackery, and the injury to health and even destruction of life caused by the use of quack medicines, to enlighten the public on these subjects, to expose the injuries sustained by the unwary from the devices and pretensions of artful empirics and impostors.
102 ÆäÀÌÁö - But no one can be considered as a regular practitioner, or a fit associate in consultation, whose practice is based on an exclusive dogma, to the rejection of the accumulated experience of the profession, and of the aids actually furnished by anatomy, physiology, pathology, and organic chemistry.
106 ÆäÀÌÁö - 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 benefit, for the insurance of lives or for analogous purposes, nor any profession or occupation, can be admitted to possess such privilege.
100 ÆäÀÌÁö - A patient should never be afraid of thus making his physician his friend and adviser; he should always bear in mind that a medical man is under the strongest obligations of secrecy. Even the female sex should never allow feelings of shame or delicacy to prevent their disclosing the seat, symptoms and causes of complaints peculiar to them. However commendable a modest reserve may be in the common occurrences of life, its strict observance in medicine is often attended with the most serious consequences...