| 1824 - 216 sider
...mediate than in its ultimate objects. The former, therefore, have a claim to uniform pre-eminence. All members of the profession, together with their wives...themselves or their families, are peculiarly dependent upon each other. But visit! should not be obtruded officiously; as sucb unasked civility may give rise... | |
| 1830 - 1098 sider
...profession, including apothecaries as well as physicians and surgeons, together with their wives ami children, should be attended gratuitously by any one...near them, whose assistance may be required. For as solitude obscures the judgment, and is accompanied with timidity and irresolution, medical men, under... | |
| Michael Ryan - 1836 - 608 sider
...pre-eminence. XVI. All members of the profession, including apothecaries as well as physicians and surgeons, together with their wives and children, should be...themselves or their families, are peculiarly dependent upon each other. But visits should not be obtruded officiously, as such unasked civility may give rise... | |
| Karl Friedrich H. Marx - 1846 - 374 sider
...ought to be but one rule on the subject, and that in accordance with the views of Percival : " All members of the profession, together with their wives...residing near them, whose assistance may be required." He adds, indeed, that " if their circumstances be affluent, a pecuniary acknowledgment should not be... | |
| 1847 - 834 sider
...their wives and children, while under the paternal care, are entitled to the gratuitous services of any one or more of the faculty residing near them, whose assistance may be desired. A physician afflicted with disease, is usually an incompetent judge of his own case ; and... | |
| 1847 - 134 sider
...wives, and their children while under the paternal care, are entitled to the gratuitous services of any one or more of the faculty residing near them, whose assistance may be desired. A physician afflicted with disease is usually an incompetent judge of his own case ; and the... | |
| 1848 - 350 sider
...wives, and their children while under the paternal care, are entitled to the gratuitous services of any one or more of the faculty residing near them, whose assistance may be desired. A physician afflicted with disease is usually an incompetent judge of his own case ; and the... | |
| Thomas Percival - 1849 - 214 sider
...§ 16. All members of the Profession (including Apothecaries, as well as Physicians and Surgeons,) together with their wives and children, should be...may be required ; for, as solicitude obscures the judgement, and is accompanied with timidity and irresolution, Medical men, under the pressure of sickness,... | |
| 1848 - 590 sider
...wives, and their children while under the paternal care, are entitled to the gratuitous services of any one or more of the faculty residing near them, whose assistance may be desired. A physician, afflicted with disease, is usually an incompetent judge of hia own case ; and... | |
| Worthington Hooker - 1849 - 492 sider
...their children while under the patsrnal care, are entitled to tha gratuAPPENDIX. itous services of any one or more of the faculty residing near them, whose assistance may be desired. A physician afflicted with disease is usually an incompetent judge of his own case ; and the... | |
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