Transactions of the American Pediatric Society, Volum 20American Pediatric Society., 1909 List of members in each volume. |
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... CITY , N. J. , May 30 , 31 and June 1 . 1907. WASHINGTON , May 7 , 8 and 9 . 1908. DELAWARE WATER GAP , May 25 , 26 and 27 . 1909. LENOX , MASS . , May 27 and 28 . OFFICERS , 1909 . COUNCIL . F. S. CHURCHILL , PRESIDENTS .
... CITY , N. J. , May 30 , 31 and June 1 . 1907. WASHINGTON , May 7 , 8 and 9 . 1908. DELAWARE WATER GAP , May 25 , 26 and 27 . 1909. LENOX , MASS . , May 27 and 28 . OFFICERS , 1909 . COUNCIL . F. S. CHURCHILL , PRESIDENTS .
Side 5
... Mass . , on May 27 and 28 , 1909 . The Secretary moved a vote of thanks to the President for one of the most successful meetings the Society had ever had , and this was accordingly given . SAMUEL S. ADAMS , M.D. , Secretary . LINNEUS ...
... Mass . , on May 27 and 28 , 1909 . The Secretary moved a vote of thanks to the President for one of the most successful meetings the Society had ever had , and this was accordingly given . SAMUEL S. ADAMS , M.D. , Secretary . LINNEUS ...
Side 10
... Mass . , reports 63 per cent . " * Obviously such statistics are without value , excepting to prove that a large percentage of children are defective , and to suggest the necessity of establishing a standard that will apply to all ...
... Mass . , reports 63 per cent . " * Obviously such statistics are without value , excepting to prove that a large percentage of children are defective , and to suggest the necessity of establishing a standard that will apply to all ...
Side 26
... Mass . The report is based on a series of 40 consecutive cases of epi- demic cerebrospinal meningitis , treated with Dr. Flexner's anti- meningitis serum . All cases in which the diplococcus intracellu- laris ' was found in the ...
... Mass . The report is based on a series of 40 consecutive cases of epi- demic cerebrospinal meningitis , treated with Dr. Flexner's anti- meningitis serum . All cases in which the diplococcus intracellu- laris ' was found in the ...
Side 57
... Mass . The patient , a boy of seventeen months , had malaise for one to two weeks , with cephalic cries . April 10th , Dr. J. W. Redmond was called because of some shuffling in walking , confined to one foot . No tenderness . In the ...
... Mass . The patient , a boy of seventeen months , had malaise for one to two weeks , with cephalic cries . April 10th , Dr. J. W. Redmond was called because of some shuffling in walking , confined to one foot . No tenderness . In the ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
abscess acute albumin amount appeared autopsy baby blood Boston Bronchopneumonia bronchus casein casts cells cent cerebrospinal fluid cerebrospinal meningitis Chapin child chronic clinical condition congenital curds developed dextrose diagnosis diarrhea died digestion diplococci disease effect epidemic esophagus examination eye test fatty acids favorable feeding fever Flexner fluid foreign body fresh air hospital hydrocephalus ileocolitis increased infants injection instances intestinal Jacobi Kernig's sign kidney kindergarten Koplik large number leukocytes lumbar puncture lung maltose meningococcus methods milk months mortality mother mucus nephritis nervous normal observation occurred onset pain paralysis pathological patient PEDIATRICS Philadelphia physical physicians pneumonia poliomyelitis positive present proteid pyelitis question reaction recovery reported Rotch seen serum showed skin spinal sporadic stomach stools symptoms teacher temperature tion trachea treated treatment tube tuberculin tuberculosis tuberculous tubules urinary urine usually ventricles vomiting weeks York
Populære avsnitt
Side 7 - How to live ? that is the essential question for us. Not how to live in the mere material sense only, but in the widest sense. The general problem which comprehends every special problem, is — the right ruling of conduct in all directions under all circumstances. In what way to treat the body ; in what way to treat the mind ; in what way to manage our affairs ; in what way to bring up a family ; in what way to behave as a citizen ; in what way to utilize all...
Side 7 - To prepare us for complete living is the function which education has to discharge ; and the only rational mode of judging of any educational course is, to judge in what degree it discharges such function.
Side 174 - It is beyond the scope of this paper to enter into a detailed discussion of these methods and only a few of the salient results will be mentioned here.
Side 150 - God lent His creatures light and air, And waters open to the skies ; Man locks him in a stifling lair, And wonders why his brother dies...
Side 8 - ... the street, and in some cases even tend to augment them. The crowding in the tenements has led to the erection of enormous school buildings, which are also crowded, for in no other way can children in the congested neighborhoods receive the benefits of education. Sitting several hours a day at a desk...
Side 7 - In what way to treat the body ; in what way to treat the mind; in what way to manage our affairs; in what way to bring up a family ; in what way to behave as a citizen ; in what way to utilize all those sources of happiness which nature supplies — how to use all our faculties to the greatest advantage of ourselves and others, how to live completely?
Side 42 - ... an antitoxic property; the positive chemotaxis for polymorphonuclear leucocytes, and the promoted phagocytosis are most definite and constant features; finally, the reduction in the number of diplococci, the change in their staining properties, and the loss of viability speak for a bactericidal power — although it is a question if this may not be explained by the phagocytosis.
Side 138 - ... as clearing houses, can take the place of the large institutions and furnish the doctors and nurses necessary to carrying on the work. A vast field can thus be covered, but the actual work must be done in small units, each represented by a certain district or locality. Belief will thus be instituted along the lines of family life with individual supervision instead of the collective life with institutional methods. The unit of civilization is the family which offers the healthiest physical environment....
Side 70 - The experimenter distinctly states that " dying children, or those who were extremely sick did not as a rule, react to any of the tests.
Side 23 - There remains one more topic to be mentioned. The indications given by the first series of serum-treated cases were to the effect that in the great majority of instances recovery from the disease would be complete. The facts brought out by the far larger series of cases on which this article is based confirm the earlier view which we expressed. The number of complications which arose in them was small, and the only persistent defect noted was deafness. This lamentable condition occurred in a few...