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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #53827 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53827)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hospital Bulletin, Vol. V, No. 2, April
-15, 1909, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Hospital Bulletin, Vol. V, No. 2, April 15, 1909
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: December 29, 2016 [EBook #53827]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOSPITAL BULLETIN, APRIL 15, 1909 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- THE HOSPITAL BULLETIN
-
-
- Published Monthly in the Interest of the Medical Department
- of the University of Maryland
-
- PRICE $1.00 PER YEAR
-
- Contributions invited from the Alumni of the University.
- Business Address, Baltimore, Md.
-
- Entered at the Baltimore Post-office
- as Second Class Matter.
-
- VOL. V BALTIMORE, Md., APRIL 15, 1909 No. 2
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- THE ETHICS OF THE GENERAL PRACTITIONER.
-
- _An Address delivered Before the University of
- Maryland Medical Association,
- March 16, 1909_,
-
- BY GUY STEELE, M. D.
- Of Cambridge, Md.
-
-
-A celebrated divine once said that the most difficult part of a sermon
-was the selection of a proper text. I must thank the President of this
-society for saving me this trouble. When, however, Webster's is
-consulted for a proper definition of the word "Ethics," and it is found
-to mean "The science of human duty," it would seem that he has chosen a
-text almost too comprehensive for the limits of a short paper, even when
-restricted to the "ethics of the medical profession." It may not be out
-of place to thank him for the honor he has conferred upon me by deeming
-one whose student days are scarce twelve years behind him worthy of
-presenting this subject to you, for a paper on this topic is almost of
-itself a sermon, and we naturally look up to those, whose many years of
-experience and works have brought them prominence, for instruction in
-morals and duty. Still, I take it, whether young or old, all of us like
-to preach on fitting occasions, and not the least part of the
-inspiration to effort is the character of the audience. My invitation
-was to read a paper before the Clinical Society, and incidentally I was
-told that some of the students had expressed a desire to be present.
-Little, however, did I anticipate such a flattering attendance from them
-when examination time so nearly approached, and it is evidence of a most
-commendable spirit when they can bring themselves to take even an hour
-of their most valuable time from study to devote to a consideration of
-the moral duties and responsibilities which shall be theirs when they
-shall have passed through the April ordeal. Much that I have to say
-tonight will be directed especially to them, and if they or their elders
-in the profession may in the years to come look back upon this night
-with the recollection that I have more forcibly brought to mind some of
-the old and half-forgotten maxims and axioms that make for a better and
-purer professional life, I will have been more than repaid for the time
-I have expended in the preparation of this paper.
-
-In discussing the ethics of the general practitioner towards his
-patient, I would have you remember that your first and most important
-duty is to give to those who trust you the very best that is in you.
-
-To you young men, full of enthusiasm for your new profession, and imbued
-with Utopian ideas of the mission which you have undertaken for the good
-of mankind, it would seem almost foolish for me to mention this as the
-first advice I would offer you. But I think I can see a smile of
-understanding flit across the faces of those who have for some years
-fought the battle of life, and who have had the wire edge of early
-ambitions and determinations blunted by contact with unappreciative
-patients and unworthy professional competition and the daily incidents
-of a busy life. They know that it is very easy to feel too tired, or be
-too busy, or have some other engrossing affair in mind which prevents
-that entire devotion to duty which all admit is essential to success in
-medicine. Half of success in life or in any undertaking is due to a
-successful start; therefore, let me ask you to firmly determine on one
-or two fixed principles, and to stick to those principles through thick
-and thin. Be fully assured that no halfway devotion to your profession
-will ever bring you prominence or success. The time-worn phrase that
-"Medicine is a jealous mistress" loses none of its truth by frequent
-repetition. Recently I saw in a prominent medical journal the advice
-given that doctors should take a prominent part in politics and bring
-themselves forward in other ways, and that thereby in some way unknown
-to me the glory of the profession would be enhanced, and much benefit
-result to the community. Far be it from me to discourage a proper civic
-spirit and a proper interest in public affairs, or to advise an
-avoidance of any duty which good citizenship imposes upon every honest,
-patriotic man, whatever his business or profession. But I take it that
-no more baneful, no more dangerous advice can be given to our young
-professional man than this. You cannot be successful in both politics
-and medicine, and while we can point to one member of our profession in
-the United States Senate, and to some notable exceptions in our own
-State, where men of our profession have, for a time, abandoned medicine
-and returned to it to win success, you can rest assured that the medical
-politician possesses little beyond a musty diploma to remind the world
-that he was once of our cult. So don't be a halfway politician and
-halfway doctor. Success in either field will take all of your best
-effort and all of your time.
-
-What I have said of politics will apply, though not quite so forcibly,
-to any other engrossing business or pleasure. Time forbids me to
-elaborate this idea, and in concluding it let me say that you cannot be
-a successful politician, merchant, sport or what not and carry medicine
-as a side line.
-
-It may seem useless to remind you that, in order to give the best that
-is in you, you must keep abreast with what is new and best in
-professional literature and scientific progress. You all have determined
-to be students, and even those who pride themselves on having passed
-through the University without having opened a book have a half-formed
-desire to really know something beyond spotting a possible examination
-question, and when once examinations are over, and they have reluctantly
-withdrawn themselves from the delights of the city by gaslight for the
-pine woods and mountain trail, they will burn the midnight oil and
-browse diligently through their musty tomes. May I tell you that nothing
-is harder than to find time for study. Many of us, even though city men,
-with the best and latest literature at our elbows, are ashamed to think
-how thoroughly we abhor the sight of a medical book or magazine, and how
-easily we can persuade ourselves that we are too tired and stale, and so
-engrossed during the day with scenes of sickness and suffering that we
-must have our brief hours of release from duty for recreation. We do
-need our hours of relaxation and rest and our too infrequent holidays,
-and they are absolutely essential to good health and good work. Don't,
-however, confuse the words rest and relaxation with sloth and idleness,
-and don't think your professional work completed when your round of
-daily visits is done. Indeed, if you would know medicine you must woo
-your mistress in the small hours of the night, and in many of the
-leisure moments that the day may bring you.
-
-Much has been spoken of the man who practices by common sense, and whose
-school has been that of observation and hard experience. A most worthy
-brother he is at times, and many are his friends and wonderful his
-success. But if the science of medicine is to advance, more is required
-for progress than mere common sense, and observation untrained and
-experience undirected and unguided by the observation and experience of
-others will rarely discover a new bacillus or elaborate a side chain
-theory. So, to be truly ethical in the duty you owe to give the best
-that is in you, you should be reading men. Take one or more of the
-medical journals. Buy for reference the latest and best text-books. Make
-the opportunity to read the daily papers and something of current
-literature. A well-rounded man can afford to do nothing less. Besides
-the information you obtain, it pays in the respect of the community to
-have the reputation of being posted in your profession. Often the
-country man simply hasn't time at home to read. A busy life, with its
-miles upon miles of dusty roads to travel, precludes all chance for the
-easy chair. Then cultivate the habit of reading while driving. Many are
-the useful and happy hours I have spent in my carriage with my journals
-and magazines. I am frank to say that, but for this habit, I never could
-have found time for one-half of the reading I have done. Last year I was
-somewhat amused when a most worthy, well-educated and well-posted man
-summed up his opinion of another by saying that he was one of those who
-read magazines in his carriage. If I mistake not, this indictment was
-brought against the late Dr. Miltenberger, who as a young and busy man
-was forced to form this habit, and I could but think that, could I die
-with half the honor and respect and love that were his, I could plead
-guilty to even this mark of devotion to my profession and desire to
-advance in it.
-
-Would you be ethical in giving the best that is in you to your patients,
-you must give ungrudgingly of your time. This may again seem a useless
-piece of advice, and yet almost all of us are familiar with the man
-whose motto is "Veni, Vidi, Vici"--"I came, I saw, I conquered." This
-intuitive diagnostician is by no means a myth. The man who comes in a
-rush and goes in a rush, and who, with pencil in one hand and
-prescription pad in the other, feels the pulse while the thermometer is
-under the tongue; who sees at a glance, without necessity of personal or
-family history or of physical examination, just what is the matter, and
-who, giving four or five prescriptions, rushes out, trusting that
-something in his shotgun therapy may hit the enemy. Perhaps the next day
-he prescribes four or five more remedies or combination of remedies, and
-should the patient begin to improve, prides himself that he has made and
-confirmed a diagnosis by his experimental therapy. Is it necessary for
-me to say that no ethical man with any regard for the rights of his
-patients and his obligation to his profession can really practice
-medicine in this manner? The plea that you are too busy to give the
-proper time to your cases is no justification for your neglect. Anything
-less than a careful inquiry into family and personal history, followed
-by a painstaking and thorough physical examination, is unjust to your
-patient and unjust to yourself. No ethical man can give the best that is
-in him by doing less than this. If you haven't the time to do your work
-thoroughly, make a clean breast of the matter and take fewer cases. But
-you will say that a man, even in large practice, cannot afford to give
-any of it up. He needs every dollar that honestly comes his way, and to
-say that he hasn't time for his work is only another way of throwing
-practice into the hands of a rival. This is, indeed, a proposition hard
-to solve, as most of us do need every dollar that honestly comes our
-way; but if our work is only half done, if we have neglected some
-important point in diagnosis, and thereby omitted some equally important
-measure in treatment, have our dollars been honestly earned? Let us
-start out with and carry in mind this axiom of a truly ethical life,
-that success in medicine cannot be measured by commercial success; that,
-while no sensible man can neglect the business side of his vocation, or
-refuse to demand and collect just compensation for his service, such
-compensation cannot be measured in dollars and cents alone; that a good
-conscience and whole-souled devotion to duty, giving ungrudgingly of the
-very best that is in you to those that have confided in you, will be
-your very best asset when the final account is made up.
-
-May I impress the fact upon you that an ethical man, with a just
-appreciation of his duty to his patients, can never be a vendor of
-patent or unofficial medicines. Indeed, I would be lacking in my duty
-if, with the opportunity this paper offers me, I did not, from the
-standpoint of experience, impress upon you with all of the force at my
-command the necessity of being wary of the detail man and the alluring
-advertising literature with which your mail will be flooded. You will
-scarcely have opened your office, and be waiting with what patience you
-can command that rush of the halt, the lame and the blind to which you
-feel that your talents entitle you, before the suave detail man, having
-heard of the new field, puts in his appearance. What you lack in
-therapeutic experience he can supply you by drawing liberally on the
-experience of others who have worked little less than miracles in an
-adjoining town by the use of his pills and potions, his elixirs and
-tinctures. You will find him smooth and oily, placid and plausible. He
-knows his story well, and even by his much speaking can almost persuade
-you that what you knew, or thought you knew, or what you had recently
-been taught, were all out of date; that by some stroke of genius the
-chemist of his house had discovered some way by which compatibles would
-combine with incompatibles into the formation of a new and staple
-mixture, possessing all of the virtues and none of the defects of its
-original constituents, rendering chloral as soothing as the strings of a
-lute and as harmless as the cooing of a dove, extracting from cod-liver
-oil every disagreeable feature and leaving nothing but its supposed
-virtues behind. He will show you the short road to fortune and success.
-Treat him kindly; the ethical man should not be rude, and brusqueness is
-not a sign of Roman honesty or virtue. Be assured he feels his position
-keenly, and is dreading the catechism which will sooner or later display
-his ignorance of everything but the story that has been drilled into him
-like a parrot.
-
-There has been no greater shame in our profession than the influence
-these men and their houses have exercised, and incidentally the
-indorsements and recommendations that thoughtless men have furnished
-them. The blame is all ours, and we cannot shun it. We pride ourselves
-on our scientific attainments; that we take nothing for granted; and,
-now that the age of empiricism has passed, we accept nothing that does
-not bear the stamp of scientific approval. And yet, before the campaign
-of the American Medical Association and the revelations of Collier's and
-the Ladies' Home Journal, we accepted our treatment from the hands of
-the manufacturing houses, and dosed our patients with nostrums about
-which we knew nothing except the statements of those whose sole purpose
-it was to sell. There are few of us who have been many years in practice
-to whom a blush of shame does not come at the recollection of our
-gullibility and our guilty innocence. Can any man deem it ethical to
-give even to a good dog something about which he was totally ignorant?
-And yet this is just what we were doing. A short time ago a particularly
-shrewd detail man was discussing this very point with me, and claiming
-that, as the formula was now required by law to be printed in each
-bottle and package, this most formidable objection could not now hold
-good. Handing me a bottle of his patent cure-all, he glibly called my
-attention to the six or seven ingredients, with the amount of each
-contained in the fluid ounce. Among other potent quantities I can recall
-1-48 gr. of morphia and 1-240 gr. of strychnia. The dose was a
-teaspoonful three times a day. Any man can imagine the more than
-homeopathic effect of 1-48 gr. of morphia divided into eight doses.
-These well-known and well-tried drugs were not, however, the life of the
-nostrum, and presently we came to the twenty minims to the fluid ounce
-of the fluid extract of the drug from which the remedy derived its name.
-Something I had never heard of. Something unlisted in the U. S. P.
-Something discovered and owned and controlled by this house alone. As my
-ignorance became more apparent his eloquence increased, and I have no
-doubt that a few years ago, before my moral conscience had become
-aroused to the therapeutic sin of prescribing something whose botanical
-family, whose chemical formula, and even whose physiological effects
-were totally unknown to me, I would gladly have accepted a sample and
-would have tried it on some poor soul too poor to pay for a
-prescription. It is nothing short of a shame to think of what we have
-done in this line. The sin has been one of carelessness and laziness
-rather than of ignorance. Here we had ready to hand some remedy,
-beautiful to the eye, palatable to the tongue; then why take the time
-and trouble to bother about constructing a formula of our own when
-someone else of equal experience had constructed one for us? I am ready
-to thank God that most of these nostrums are as harmless as they are
-beautiful, and, while I may not have done good, I rarely did harm by
-their use. I am not discussing the opium and cocaine laden classes. I
-wish to emphasize incalculable harm that must result to the physician
-himself who allows someone to do his thinking for him. I am also
-referring to the attitude of the ethical man to his patient, and beg to
-ask if we are doing even part of our duty when we are doing no harm.
-Allow me to conclude this topic by asking you to spend an hour some day
-in casually glancing over (a deep study would fully repay you) the pages
-of the U. S. P., or a list of the remedies that have in one year
-received the sanction of the Council on Pharmacy of American Medical
-Association. If you don't find enough drugs and combinations to meet
-every case and every conceivable situation, you had better desert
-practice and exploit some wonderful cure-all as a detail man.
-
-If we, as physicians, had nothing but our duty to our patients to
-consider, and incidentally our own profit and glory, the practice of
-medicine would soon degenerate into a mere trade. I may even say that,
-had we nothing but the promptings of our consciences to keep us in the
-straight and narrow path, if we had nothing but the knowledge of work
-well done, and if the desire and determination to give the best that is
-in us were our only incentives to an ethical life, the profession would
-be so beset by the temptations of commercialism, and the notoriety and
-prominence which commercial success brings, that the halls of Esculapius
-would soon need a scouring and purging greater than Hercules gave the
-Augean stables. Despite the high incentive to all that is best and
-purest in life which our noblest of callings should beget in us,
-physicians are only human, and human weakness, like disease, is no
-respecter of persons or of callings. It may have been that the medical
-fathers, with a knowledge of the temptations to which they were
-subjected, and a desire to save others from the pitfalls which beset
-their paths, were imbued with a determination to place their profession
-on a higher plane than others; or it may have been the natural evolution
-which inevitably resulted from and followed the promptings of man to
-help his fellow-man, to devote himself to the relief of pain and
-sickness, to sacrifice his comfort and ease and almost every pleasure in
-order that others might have ease of body and peace of mind and soul,
-which from the earliest days have placed medicine as a profession apart,
-and have imposed upon those who have entered its ranks certain standards
-of conduct and insisted on certain ethical relations which have lifted
-it above mere questions of gain and the vain acquisition of renown. We
-have been taught that Hippocrates himself was great not only as a
-physician, but greater still as an ethical teacher who has left with us
-certain maxims and proverbs which, though handed down through the ages,
-have lost none of their truth and none of their spotless morality. Even
-in the Middle Ages, when learning, not to say science, had sunk into
-such an abyss of ignorance that the ability to write one's name lifted
-one into the ranks of the educated, when human ills were relieved more
-often with the sword than with the scalpel, the leech was a man apart.
-His education, his scientific investigations, and even his supposed
-communion and partnership with the evil one, placed his on a pedestal
-above other professional callings. Then, as now, though men might scoff
-at our profession of superior knowledge and skill, when "pallida mors"
-stalked abroad or knocked at the hovels of the poor or palaces of the
-rich, all arose to call us blessed. It has been often said that, could a
-medical man live up to the ethical standards of his profession, his
-chances without creed or priest would not be small at the last great
-day. But with all of our high ideals we are only mortal, and we know and
-have sorrowed at the fact that many of our ethical standards are not
-lived up to, and that the Hippocratic law is frequently more honored in
-the breach than in the observance.
-
-We have in every community where one or two are gathered together in the
-name of medicine the man who is everything to your face and everything
-else behind your back; who damns by faint praise; who sympathizes with
-you in your sorrows and trials, who visits the family of the patient you
-have lost to assure them of your skill and to insist that everything was
-done that could have been done, "but"----and that one harmless little
-conjunction, meaning nothing in itself, is more eloquent than a thousand
-terrible adjectives or burning, blistering adverbs or participles. So
-many things can be said by the pious uplifting of the eyes, the
-sanctimonious upturning of the palms. He would not for the world leave a
-doubt in the minds of your people, and, no matter what in his inmost
-heart he thinks of your mistakes (from his standpoint), it is not his
-place to injure a brother, but, alas! he is not responsible for the
-unguarded tongues of his friends, and he usually sees that they do his
-work well for him. Often it is "if I could only have reached him
-earlier," which, being interpreted, means a miracle would have been
-wrought. Almost every community has its miracle worker, its medical
-resurrectionist. His cases are always a little worse than others, his
-victories a little more wonderful. Where you have a bronchitis, he has a
-desperate pneumonia, your transitory albuminuria is with him acute
-Bright's, and hopeless cases follow him to undo him, only to meet defeat
-at his skillful hands. You hear that Mr. A. is desperately ill with
-pneumonia on Monday, and on Friday you meet him on the street, looking
-hale and hearty, firmly believing that, had Dr. X. been one hour later
-in reaching him, he would ere this have been gathered to his fathers.
-Should you mildly suggest that some error in diagnosis might have been
-made, that even the best of us at times go wrong, and that resolution in
-true pneumonia could hardly be expected in four days, you will find that
-he has been prepared for you, feeling that Dr. X. has used some potent
-remedy as yet unknown to you and his less skillful brethren, and firmly
-convinced that your suspicions of his case are based upon your ignorance
-or your jealousy of poor Dr. X., who was not there to defend himself,
-who had always spoken so kindly of you, and had uttered nothing worse
-than the harmless little conjunction "but"----
-
-A little bragging is not a sin, and indeed is usually harmless, and in
-the long run reacts on the miracle worker. But the ethical man does
-frequently suffer from it, and it is a fact, absurd as it may seem, that
-the average man or woman would much prefer to be considered at death's
-door about three-fifths of the time--indeed, almost a walking
-Lazarus--than to be deemed the picture and personification of vigorous
-health. Dr. X. knows this, and plays upon the credulity of his patients.
-He frightens them to death's door, works a miracle, and has tied them to
-himself forever. We all have suffered from this, and will continue to do
-so until the little grain of truth has grown from the tiny mustard seed
-to the vigorous bush. Dr. X., with his faults, has his virtues. He
-aspires to be the busiest man, the richest man, the most popular man in
-his community. All of these ambitions, if properly guided, are laudable,
-and, indeed, while enhancing his power and prestige, may be redounding
-to the good of his people, for a man to be the busiest and most popular
-man in his profession must usually be the best posted, the most highly
-educated, the hardest working man, not only for himself, but for those
-he serves. So, while we may smile at Dr. X. and his big ways, we may
-love him for his virtues and forgive his small faults.
-
-But for the man who deliberately goes to work to undermine another; who
-takes advantage of some temporary absence of the regular physician to
-ingratiate himself; who, appreciating the fact that people worried
-nearly to death by the illness of a loved one, will forget every
-obligation and desert every old friend in the hope that the new one may
-offer some encouragement or extend some hope, is ready for these
-emergencies. He carries satchels full of hope for all cases and
-occasions. He prescribes it liberally, diluted, however, to the point of
-despair because he was called in an hour too late, or because the case
-had already been damaged beyond his power of repair. This gentleman
-advances not only by his own deceit, but uses the power of church, of
-politics, of family influence and social opportunity, to lift himself
-along. Verily he has his reward, but it is not in peace of mind, not in
-the honor and respect of his community, but the contempt of every honest
-man, be he of the profession or laity. Not the least of the perplexing
-questions which beset the man who is trying to lead an ethical life is
-his duty in his relation as consultant. Indeed, there is scarcely a
-situation in professional life that at times presents more embarrassing
-possibilities, or calls for the exercise of more tact. It is a pleasure
-to be able to bear witness to the ability of the man who has called you
-to his aid, to assure the family that everything has been done that care
-in diagnosis and skill in treatment could demand. But what of the cases
-where gross carelessness or blind ignorance have hastened what might
-easily have been delayed or averted? There is only one way here, only
-one duty. Treat the man as his carelessness or his ignorance deserves.
-Again, you are called in consultation with a thoroughly good man who has
-given ungrudgingly of the best that is in him. Perhaps your superior
-skill in certain lines, perhaps your superior opportunity to observe a
-certain line of cases, have taught you something that he has not had the
-chance to learn. As before it was your duty to expose the careless
-ignorance of one, now it is your place to so give your opinion and
-explain your position that no possible reflection can be cast upon the
-other. Don't approach a consultation with the manner of a priest of
-Delphi. Don't pose as the fountain of all wisdom and of all experience.
-Indeed, in this work you will be surprised how often you will learn from
-him you are called upon to assist. He has seen the case for days, where
-you can spend but minutes with it. It is his part to bear the blame,
-yours to share his fame should success crown your combined efforts.
-
-Frequently you will be called upon when a resort to surgery is
-demanded--not so much to perform the operation as to give your opinion
-as to the advisability of a certain line of procedure. Having determined
-what is to be done, don't assume the place of prominence. You have
-little by way of reputation to gain by performing an operation that you
-were known to be competent to perform or you would never have been
-called. Let him do the work with your assistance and advice. In this way
-you will have gained a fast friend for future consultations, and you
-will have enshrined him in the esteem and confidence of his people.
-Therefore, help him and uplift and bear witness to his worth, and don't
-humiliate him by your airs and assumed superiority.
-
-As a last word, don't consult with an unworthy man, for be assured that
-your reputation is worth more to you than any consultation fee, however
-badly you may think you need it.
-
-The question of fees is one that must be considered. We hate to think of
-the combination of medicine and money, and our patients abhor it even
-more. The days once were when only the sons of the rich sought the
-liberal professions. It was thought unworthy in the days of the dim ages
-for a pupil of Esculapius to charge for his services. Any remuneration
-that came to him was an offering of gratitude--indeed an honorarium
-which might be tendered or withheld at the will of the patient. A truly
-noble conception this, that the good we offered was beyond a mere
-question of price. Equally comforting was the belief that the ill which
-resulted despite our best efforts was no reflection on our skill, but an
-evidence of the wrath of the Gods. Would that we were as near Olympus
-now as then, and that the Gods walked with men to reward the worthy and
-punish the unjust. Would also that the manners and costumes and climate
-of Ancient Greece were still with us, so that man need take little heed
-of raiment beyond a robe and sandals; that he required no expensive
-outlay for instruments, no intricate electric outfit, and no automobile.
-What a life ours would be if now as then our grateful patients sought
-us, and we passed our many hours of leisure in eloquent discussion or in
-lazy lounging amid the leafy groves or shaded porticos of the temples!
-But the times have changed, and we have changed with them, and abhor as
-we will the combination of medicine and money, we are forced to take
-thought of the morrow and to spend many, many anxious moments in this
-thought and in trying to evolve ways and means by which a balance can be
-maintained between the honoraria of patients, both grateful and
-ungrateful, and the claims of persistent creditors. Perhaps it is best
-thus, as the average man needs some incentive to good work beyond the
-acquisition of honor and glory. An axiom in the question of fees is
-this, that in order to be respected we must respect ourselves, and no
-one can respect himself unless he holds his calling above a trade and
-bases his charges upon this feeling of respect for himself and his
-profession. This axiom should be held in mind in arranging any fee
-table, and should be insisted upon in our settlements with those who
-think a doctor's bill should be discounted from one-quarter to one-half.
-I have often wondered how this right to a discount in a doctor's bill
-ever got such a firm hold in the public mind. Perhaps the city man
-cannot appreciate this fact like his country brother. The poor, honest
-old farmer, part of the bone and sinew of the land, expects the highest
-cash price for everything that he sells. If anybody has ever heard of
-one who when ten barrels of corn at $3.50 per barrel comes to $35,
-offering to take $25 for his bill, he should corral and cage this rara
-avis. But hundreds of us from the rural districts have been deemed mean
-and close-fisted and extortionate because we gently insist that $35
-worth of professional services rendered are worth $35 and not $25.
-
-This is largely our own fault, for so many of us present a bill in one
-hand and an apology in the other. We collect our bills not as if they
-were our just dues, but with a half-hearted insistence, inducing our
-debtor to believe that we have scruples ourselves as to the value of our
-services, and that a liberal discount from the face of the bill will
-about bring us to a fair settlement. It will be better for all--for
-patient as well as physician--to realize that the "science of human
-duty" implies a duty to oneself as well as a duty to the public, and
-that a small proportion of the charity of our profession should begin at
-home. To the young men I would especially give this advice: Having
-settled on a fair and honest fee for your services, do not depart from
-this fee. With us, as a rule, prosperity in the form of a numerous
-clientage comes sooner than to the other professions. You will not long
-have opened your office before you will be surprised at the number who
-demand your services. There will be no doubt of the demand, for those
-who pay the least invariably demand the most. Don't turn them away, for
-if you properly employ your time, you will gain in experience and
-occasionally a dollar or two. You will soon be enlightened as to your
-popularity, for the first pay day will send most of them to another and
-it is presumed easier man. Many of those who stick will tell you that
-Dr. ---- never charged but 50 cents a visit, when the regular fee is
-$1.00. Dr. ---- will vigorously deny this and produce his books to prove
-his truth. Here is everything plain before you. Every visit is listed at
-the established figure. You will rarely see his cash book, for then the
-whole transaction would be plain, and you would discover the simple
-manner by which in every community some supposedly ethical man is
-supplanting his truly ethical brother by charging full fees and settling
-for half.
-
-Dr. ---- will cut 50 cents or a dollar from the established fees for
-out-of-town work, and immensely increase his practice by it. For be it
-understood the bone and sinew of the land dearly love the wholes and
-halves, and will flock to sell in the dearest and pay in the cheapest
-market. Don't envy this man his prosperity and, above all, don't follow
-in his footsteps. Bide your time with the assurance that the man who
-charges $1.00 for $2.00 worth of service rarely gives more than a
-dollar's value, and that when a real emergency arises and a capable,
-honest man is demanded, one who respects himself and his calling, if you
-have prepared yourself and are known to give the best that is in you,
-the cheap man will go to the wall and your merit will receive its
-reward. If by chance any of you have not seen Dr. McCormick's paper on
-this question of fees and collections, let him by all means find the
-proper A. M. A. Journal and read it. It is a classic worth any man's
-time and attention. In concluding this subject, let me endorse what he
-says about the cheap man, the price-cutter. Whatever his charge may be,
-he is usually getting full value for his services. Realizing his lack of
-education or ability or temperament, or whatever it is that puts him
-below his professional competitor, he cuts his fees in order to live. It
-is not our place to meet his competition, but to pity him, to extend to
-him the helping hand, to endeavor to elevate him to our standard, and
-never to lower ourselves to his.
-
-I have only a few words to say on the subject of professional
-confidences. So sacred is the relation between the physician and patient
-regarded that the courts will not compel a physician, while on the
-witness stand and under oath, to tell the truth, and not only the truth,
-but the whole truth, to reveal what is imparted to him in confidence by
-his patient.
-
-If in this exalted function of doing justice between man and man the
-courts will not compel the recital of some important piece of evidence,
-how carefully should we regard our professional relation, and see to it
-that neither in strict confidence or in idle gossip do we betray the
-secrets that suffering man has confided in us.
-
-It may be somewhat out of place in a paper dealing with "The Ethics of
-the General Practitioner" to speak of the tendency, or perhaps better,
-the half-formed determination of the majority of every class to be
-specialists. I must confine myself to the predilection of the average
-medical student for surgery. It was so in my day, and I suppose it is so
-now, that almost 75 per cent. of the graduating classes are thoroughly
-satisfied that the end and aim of medicine is surgery; that practice and
-the less spectacular branches are parts of the profession essential to
-it as a whole, and fitted for those who intend to lead the plodding
-life, but too slow and too prosaic for the man bursting with the
-knowledge of his own brilliancy and his own special fitness. There is no
-question but that this tendency has done much to lower the average
-fitness of many classes. Men become listless and careless, neglecting
-everything but their hobby, and while the surgical amphitheatre is
-crowded, the medical clinics will be shunned, even deserted were it not
-that the sections are such that the absentees can be spotted and warned.
-There is no question also but that indifference to everything but
-surgery is responsible for many of the failures before the State
-Examining Boards. We must have surgeons, and they must begin their
-training in medical schools, and it is not my purpose to discourage
-earnest work and honest effort to this end. I wish, however, to say that
-every ethical specialist needs a thorough grounding in the general
-branches of medicine, and he should not in his student days neglect the
-other essentials to a well-rounded man. Most heartily do I wish to
-condemn the careless, happy-go-lucky manner in which so many men totally
-unprepared and totally unsuited by temperament for this branch "rush in
-where angels fear to tread." I wish especially to draw your attention to
-the fact that there is a vast difference between the operator and the
-surgeon. Almost any young man with a disregard of the sight of blood,
-with nerves unaffected by human suffering and a heart untouched by a
-knowledge of his power to do harm, can in six months' practice on the
-cadaver learn to cut, to sew and to ligate with neatness and despatch.
-Indeed, there may be many before me of the student body whose young and
-nimble fingers could teach dexterity to the best surgeons of the city.
-Very many with no pretense to this dexterity, and no equipment but a
-superabundance of assurance, graduate as surgeons and assume and aspire
-to a position of prominence that it has taken the true surgeon years of
-the hardest, closest, most untiring study, observation and work to
-reach. We are told as an excuse for this remarkable evolution from the
-student to the surgeon that the young man of today is taught so much
-more than the old men were; that the very manner of teaching, the
-equipment of the schools and the superior requirements for matriculation
-cannot but turn out better posted and more competent men. There is much
-truth in this. There is much truth also in the fact that while more is
-taught, more, infinitely more, is demanded of the student, and the
-knowledge that would have secured him a diploma fifty years ago will now
-scarcely carry him through his freshman year.
-
-We also hear that "I want to be a surgeon, because surgery accomplished
-positive results." This is very true also, and it is evident that if you
-amputate a leg your patient will be minus a member. Don't lose sight of
-another fact, however, that if without being competent to meet any
-unforeseen emergency that may arise, you lightly open the abdominal
-cavity, you will have a positive result in the shape of your own little
-private graveyard. The newly graduated surgeon is not as dangerous as
-the man who left medical school years ago, before the students received
-one-third of the surgical training that they do now. Many of these men
-have not taken a post-graduate course, have never been associated with a
-hospital, nor have they had even an opportunity for moderate surgical
-observation; and yet they are attempting to do the work that only a
-skilled specialist should undertake. I am not speaking of emergency
-surgery for which any man should try to prepare himself, and be brave
-enough to undertake when human life is at stake. I am referring to
-operations of election when the services of a competent man can be
-secured. The point is just this, gentlemen, that medicine as a science
-is the result of evolution and not the creation of some brilliant brain;
-that what has been done in it has been accomplished not so much by
-inspiration as by close plodding work, exhaustive experiment and
-continual observation; that surgery as one of its branches cannot be
-mastered in the four years of student life, but that to be surgeons you
-must be workers and observers. It will not do to settle the matter by
-saying that a man must make a start. This truth is too self-evident to
-be smart, nor is it entirely convincing. An answer equally true will be
-that you will not allow the embryo surgeon to start on you, and before
-you put yourself or your wife or your mother in his hands you will
-demand that he possess some other qualification for his specialty
-besides his conceit, his gall and his need of the fee. There may be some
-exceptions where the man is born and not made, but I beg to assure you
-that the surgeon rarely springs full-fledged and fully fitted from the
-brain of Minerva.
-
-Our profession is nothing if not altruistic. It demands daily and hourly
-more of self-sacrifice, more of self-devotion, than any secular calling.
-Indeed, the comparison is often drawn between the nobility and necessity
-of the duties which we perform and those of him who by divine
-inspiration and laying on of hands has been called to succor the
-diseased soul. It is not my place nor is it my purpose to enter into a
-discussion of this point, and I mention it only to show that we are
-marked men in every community; that we are placed on a higher plane and
-that more is expected of us than of our brethren of the other liberal
-professions. This, indeed, is right, for no man, the priest possibly
-excepted, enters into such intimate relations with his people. He is
-ever present with them to share their sorrows and their joys, and in his
-position of family friend and family confessor it is his place to bind
-and salve wounds more deadly than those made by the hand of man. It is a
-popular impression that this close relationship between the physician
-and his people is one evolved by the brain of the novelist or one
-possessed by that most beloved, but now extinct, old family physician.
-Let us get this impression from our minds and let us realize that our
-duties, our responsibilities and our relationship to those we serve are
-just the same, are just as close, and are just as engrossing as they
-were when that dear old patriarch of the profession made his rounds,
-scolding some, chiding others and advising all to better, purer and
-nobler lives. Changed as our relationship to the community may be in
-some respects by the translation of many of the brightest and best of
-our cult into the ranks of the specialist, it is still and always will
-be the general practitioner who is looked up to as "the physician," and
-by his work in professional and private life our profession will be
-judged.
-
-In the beginning of my paper I stated I could do little more than
-rehearse to you some of the old axioms and maxims that have been handed
-down to us for generations. I am aware that I have taught you nothing
-new tonight, and that I have not tapped that fountain of inspiration
-from which genius gushes in poetic or oratorical streams. I trust I may
-have convinced you that it is not amiss for us at times to hold close
-communion with our souls, and to take stock of our moral and
-professional assets. The further I have advanced the more fully I have
-realized how impossible it is to evolve new ideas or elaborate new
-creeds to supersede those by which the fathers lived and died and earned
-honor for themselves and our profession.
-
-So we face today, gentlemen, just about the same propositions that have
-always been ours to meet, and what was ethical one hundred years ago is
-ethical now.
-
-The science of human duty simply demands that you be honest to
-yourselves, honest to those you serve; that you may look every man
-squarely in the face and not as if you feared he had heard something you
-had said behind his back. May I quote to you the words of the Earl of
-St. Vincent to the immortal Nelson: "It is given to us all to deserve
-success; mortals cannot command it."
-
-
-
-
- THE STUDY OF RECTAL SURGERY IN
- NEW YORK CITY.
-
- BY J. DAWSON REEDER, M. D.,
- _Lecturer on Osteology, University of Maryland,
- Baltimore, Md._
-
-
-Having decided to take a course in Rectal Surgery, I arrived in New York
-and matriculated at the New York Polyclinic Hospital on October 1st for
-a course of instructions under Prof. James P. Tuttle, and desire to
-herewith describe briefly my reception:
-
-Professor Tuttle is a finished surgeon of the old school of gentlemen, a
-master of his art, and, under all conditions and circumstances, adheres
-strictly to the ethics of the profession. I was not only most cordially
-received by him socially, but was most fortunate in being honored by
-requesting me to assist him, or be present, on operations upon his
-private patients at an uptown hospital. This unexpected and friendly
-honor gave me an opportunity to observe closely the work of this great
-surgeon in detail, and I had the pleasure of witnessing every case under
-his care during my three months' visit. As to his colossal work on
-cancer of the rectum and sigmoid, his results are too well known for me
-to dwell upon at this time, and he has an enviable record which makes
-him the authority of this distressing malady which is so prevalent in
-the cases referred to the Rectal surgeon, and have so long been
-unrecognized by the general profession. I had the pleasure of witnessing
-him extirpate the rectum by his bone-flap and perineal route, and in
-some of these cases was honored by being his assistant. As to the method
-and technique in each of the above mentioned, I will endeavor to give
-later. Another very important point gained by association with this
-surgeon was, that my own theory as to the merits of the Whitehead
-operation were simply an endorsement of his teachings, namely, that this
-particular operation, while classical, was only justifiable in selected
-cases of hemorrhoids, while the Clamp and Cautery or the Ligature method
-had no restrictions as to variety or location of the pile mass.
-
-Another important subject was the question of treatment of Tubercular
-fistula. For a number of years Dr. Tuttle said he was most discouraged
-in his results and had almost abandoned any attempt to cure this class
-of infections, but of late he had obtained most excellent results by
-introducing his soft flexible probe and following this tract with a
-grooved director; opening this throughout its entire extent, and then
-completely cauterizing at dull red heat with the actual cautery. This is
-then packed with iodoform gauze, and since using the cautery, his
-results have been decidedly better. Under the direction of his
-assistant, Dr. J. M. Lynch, a class of three was formed, with regular
-work and instructions in the dispensary of St. Bartholomew's Clinic,
-where we were given cases to diagnose and treat. This course consisted
-in introduction of proctoscope and sigmoidscope diagnosis of ulcerations
-specific and benign, and local treatment through this instrument. To the
-inexperienced the results and probabilities gained through the use of
-this pneumatic instrument of Tuttle's, which is a modification of the
-Laws proctoscope, are surprising. By the electric illumination with
-which it is equipped one is able to introduce the instrument with
-absolute safety to the patient for a distance of 10 to 14 inches,
-exploring the entire circumference from the anus up through the sigmoid.
-
-My next course of instructions was under the direction of Prof. Samuel
-Gant at the New York Post-Graduate Medical School. Dr. Gant likewise was
-most cordial in his reception, and on several occasions honored me by
-entertainments, including letters of membership to his club, and at his
-home with his family. Dr. Gant, also a master of his art, has made a
-reputation of renown, and is a most successful operator. While of an
-entirely different character from that of Dr. Tuttle he is equally
-attractive. Dr. Gant argues that the majority of cases of cancer when
-seen by the specialist are too far advanced to offer any hope by radical
-operation, and generally limits his attempts at relief to a colostomy.
-As to the merits of this procedure, I am not sufficiently versed to
-offer criticism further than to say that the results of Dr. Tuttle are
-certainly encouraging to the surgeon who will undertake this ordeal of
-extirpation in hopes of eradicating the disease, while Dr. Gant's
-operation of colostomy, of course, is only palliative, he making no
-claims of a cure, except when the growth is seen very early and is
-freely movable; then he will extirpate.
-
-As to the operation for hemorrhoids, Dr. Gant uses ligature and sterile
-water anesthesia in nearly every case, and the patient is thereby cured
-without the administration of a general anesthetic. The difference in
-the time of recovery is a question to be always considered, in my own
-judgment, and is as follows: Dr. Tuttle uses the clamp and cautery
-almost universally, and the patient is discharged within the period of
-one week, while the ligature method requires local treatments to the
-ulcerations produced by the sluffing of the linen threads, and takes
-from 10 days to three weeks.
-
-Constipation and Obstipation are treated surgically by both of these
-gentlemen by the operation of Sigmoidopexy or Colopexy, which consists
-in anchoring the gut to the abdominal parietes after having first
-stripped back the peritoneum over the area covered by their sutures.
-
-Chronic diarrheas and Amœbic Dysentery are likewise treated by
-Appendicostomy and Caecostomy. The difference in this operation being
-that the former consists in delivering the appendix upon the abdomen and
-fixing the same with catgut sutures until the peritoneal cavity is
-walled off by adhesions, and then amputating later, so that the stump
-may be dilated to permit of regular colonic irrigations.
-
-Dr. Gant performs a similar operation, to which he has applied the name
-of Caecostomy, and having devised an ingenious director consisting of
-one metal rod within a tube of slightly larger calibre, he is able to
-pass the obturator through the ileo-caecal valve, and then, by
-withdrawing the rod or obturator, is able to pass a rubber catheter into
-the small intestine. The metal tube is then withdrawn and a shorter
-catheter is placed parallel with the long one, which necessarily is in
-the caput, and after placing clips upon each tube to prevent leakage, he
-is able to flush out both large and small bowel at desired intervals.
-
-As to the irrigations through these newly-made openings, it is a matter
-of choice with different operators, those in greatest favor, I think,
-being Ice Water, Aq. Ext Krameria and Quinine Solution.
-
-A very interesting case brought before us by Dr. Tuttle was one of
-Specific Stricture of the Rectum, and the treatment anticipated is as
-follows: He performed a Maydl-Reclus Colostomy in the transverse colon,
-in order first to treat the ulcerations and infected area locally, and,
-secondly, so that he would have sufficient gut above the stricture to do
-a Perineal extirpation later and bring down new healthy intestine from
-the upper Sigmoid for a new permanent anus; then later he would close
-the artificial anus in the transverse colon, and his patient should have
-a perfect result. The period required for these three operations would
-cover a period of not less than nine months; and if after this there is
-not perfect Sphincteric action, Dr. Tuttle does a plastic operation to
-repair his sphincter.
-
-Before continuing with a brief description of the technique of
-Extirpation as above referred to, I wish to herewith express my sincere
-gratitude and appreciation of the many honors and courtesies extended to
-me by these gentlemen, and am quite sure that the same was not all
-personal, but honor to the University of Maryland's Faculty of Physic,
-who have aided so materially this younger specialty by such men as
-Hemmeter, Pennington and Earle, who are constantly quoted by all
-intestinal and rectal surgeons.
-
-
-EXTIRPATION OF RECTUM.
-
-The operation of removing the rectum is now almost two centuries old.
-Faget performed it in 1739, but Listfrane first successfully extirpated
-the rectum for cancer in 1826. The results of the operation in nine
-cases were embodied in a thesis by one of his students (Penault, Thesis,
-Paris, 1829), and in 1833 the great surgeon himself gave to the world a
-complete account of his operation and method, thus establishing the
-procedure as a surgical measure. The results in these cases were not
-calculated to create any great enthusiasm, for the mortality was high
-owing to the lack of aseptic technique. The methods described in older
-books give us five varieties of operation for extirpation--the perineal,
-the sacral, the vaginal, the abdominal and the combined. In this paper I
-shall only endeavor to describe briefly the two methods used by Dr.
-Tuttle. Before describing these methods in detail it may be well to
-consider the preparation of the patient, which is practically the same
-in each. In order to obtain the best results, it is necessary to
-increase the patient's strength as far as possible by forced feeding for
-a time, to empty the intestinal tract of all hard and putrifying faecal
-masses, to establish as far as we may intestinal antisepsis and to
-check, in a measure, the purulent secretion from the growth. It requires
-from 7 to 10 days, or longer, to properly prepare a patient for this
-operation. The diet best calculated to obtain a proper condition of the
-intestinal tract is generally conceded to be a nitrogenous one. The
-absolute milk diet is not so satisfactory as a mixed diet composed of
-meat, strong broth, milk and a small quantity of bread and refined
-cereals. The patient should be fed at frequent intervals, and as much as
-he can digest. Along with this forced feeding one should administer
-daily a saline laxative which will produce two or three thin movements,
-and to disinfect the intestinal canal one should give through the
-stomach three or four times a day sulpho-carbolate of zinc, grs. iiss.,
-in form of an enteric pill. On the day previous to the operation the
-perinaeum, sacral region and pubis should be shaved, dressed with a soap
-poultice for two hours, then washed and dressed with bichloride
-dressing, which should be retained until patient is anesthetized.
-Notwithstanding all of these preparations, it is impossible to obtain
-absolute asepsis of the affected area, and so many fatalities occur from
-infection that it is deemed wise by many surgeons to make an artificial
-inguinal anus as a preliminary procedure in all extirpations of the
-rectum.
-
-
-PERINEAL METHOD.
-
-Under this method may be included certain operations for small
-epitheliomas low down in the rectum done through the anus. The patient
-having been properly prepared, the sphincter is thoroughly dilated; a
-circular incision through the entire wall of the gut is made, and the
-segment is caught with traction forceps and dragged by an assistant
-while the operator frees, by scissors and blunt dissection, to a point
-at least one-half inch above the cancer. The free end of the gut is then
-tied with strong tape, as the temptation is very great to put your
-finger in the bowel as a guide, and thereby invite infection. A deep
-dorsal incision is then made, going down to the right of the coccyx
-through the post-rectal tissue. The hand is then placed in the sacral
-fossa and the structures lifted out into the pelvis, after which this
-space is thoroughly packed with gauze to control the bleeding and hold
-the structures out of the fossa. The edges of the wound, including each
-half of the sphincter which has been cut posteriorly, are held by flat
-retractors, while the operator proceeds to dissect the anterior portion
-of the rectum loose from its attachments. A sound should be held in the
-urethra in men and an assistant's finger in the vagina in women to
-prevent wounding these organs. After the gut has been dissected out well
-above the tumor, it is caught by clamps and cut off below these.
-Bleeding is controlled by ligatures and equal parts of hot water and
-alcohol. This newly-exposed gut is then sterilized by pure carbolic acid
-and alcohol, or may be seared with cautery. Sometimes the peritoneum can
-be stripped off from the rectum and its cavity need not be opened; it is
-better, however, to open the cavity at once when the growth extends
-above this point. The peritoneum is incised, cut loose from its
-attachments close to the rectum, back to the mesorectum, which should be
-cut close to the sacrum, in order to avoid the inferior mesenteric
-artery. When the gut has been loosened sufficiently above the tumor, it
-may be still fastened by two lateral peritoneal reflections, which are
-the lateral rectal ligaments, and should be cut at once. The gut is then
-brought down and sutured to the anus, and the operator should proceed to
-close the peritoneum and restore the planes of the pelvic floor down to
-the levator ani by fine catgut sutures. After this has been
-accomplished, the anus, which is now well outside the operative field,
-should be reopened, the gauze removed, and the gut flushed with a
-solution of bichloride or peroxide of hydrogen. Quenu advises that in
-amputating each layer should be cut separately, in order to avoid
-hemorrhage, but there appears to be no advantage in this; in fact, we
-are more likely to meet with deficient blood supply, causing subsequent
-sloughing of the gut, than with hemorrhage. The posterior and anterior
-portions of the perineal wound are packed with gauze and left open to
-assure drainage, and the parts are covered with aseptic pads, held in
-position by a well-fitting "T" bandage. A large drainage tube is passed
-well up into the rectum, its lower end extending outside of the
-dressings, in order to convey the discharges and gases beyond the
-operative wound.
-
-
-TUTTLE'S BONE FLAP OPERATION.
-
-"The Kraske Operation" is applied to various methods in which access to
-the rectum is obtained by removing the coccyx or cutting off certain
-portions of the lower end of the sacrum. They are all modifications of
-Kraske's original method, with which we are all familiar. Dr. Tuttle has
-modified this plan, as it furnishes a rapid and adequate approach to the
-rectum; it facilitates the control of hemorrhage and restores the bony
-floor of pelvis and attachment of the anal muscles, and involves injury
-of the sacral nerves and lateral sacral arteries on one side only. The
-technique which he employs is as follows:
-
-The patient is previously prepared as heretofore described, and an
-artificial anus established or not, as the conditions indicate; before
-the final scrubbing the sphincter should be dilated and the rectum
-irrigated with bichloride 1-2000 or hydrogen peroxide. It should then be
-packed with absorbent gauze, so that the finger cannot be introduced.
-The patient is then placed in the prone position on the left side, with
-the hips elevated on a hard pillow or sandbag; an oblique incision is
-made from the level of the third foramen on right side of sacrum down to
-the tip of the coccyx, and extending half-way between this point and the
-posterior margin of the anus.
-
-This incision should be made boldly with one stroke through the skin,
-muscles and ligaments into the cellular tissue posterior to the rectum;
-the rectum is then rapidly separated by the fingers from the sacrum, and
-the space thus formed and the wound should be firmly packed with sterile
-gauze. A transverse incision down to the bone is then made at a level of
-the 4th sacral foramen, the bone is rapidly chiseled off in this line,
-and the triangular flap is pulled down to the left side and held by
-retractor. At this point it is usually necessary to catch and tie the
-right lateral and middle sacral arteries. Frequently these are the only
-vessels that need to be tied during the entire operation, although if
-one cuts too far away from the sacrum, the right sciatic may be severed.
-The first step in the actual extirpation of the rectum consists in
-isolating the organ below the level of the resected sacrum, so that a
-ligature can be thrown around it, or a long clamp applied to control any
-bleeding from its walls. If the neoplasm extends above this level and it
-is necessary to open the peritoneal cavity to extirpate it, one should
-do this at once, as it will be found much easier to dissect the rectum
-out by following the course of the peritoneal folds. By opening the
-peritoneum and incising its lateral folds close to the rectum, the
-danger of wounding the ureters is greatly decreased and the gut is much
-more easily dragged down.
-
-When the posterior peritoneal folds or meso-rectum is reached, the
-incision should be carried as far away from the rectum, or, rather, as
-close to the sacrum, as possible in order to avoid wounding the superior
-hemorrhoids artery, and to remove all the sacral glands. The gut should
-be loosened and dragged down until its healthy portion easily reaches
-the anus or healthy segment below the growth. A strong clamp should then
-be placed upon the intestine about one inch above the neoplasm, but
-should never be placed in the area involved by it; for in so doing the
-friable walls may rupture and the contents of the intestine be poured
-out into the wound. As soon as the gut has been sufficiently liberated
-and dragged down, the peritoneal cavity should be cleansed by wiping
-with dry sterilized gauze and closed by sutures which attach the
-membrane to the gut. By this procedure the entire intraperitoneal part
-of the operation is completed and this cavity closed before the
-intestine is incised. After this is done the gut should be cut across
-between two clamps or ligatures above the tumor, the ends being
-cauterized with carbolic acid and covered with rubber protective tissue.
-The lower segment containing the neoplasm may then be dissected from
-above downward in an almost bloodless manner until the lowest portion is
-reached. It is much more easily removed in this direction than from
-below upward, and there is less danger of wounding the other pelvic
-organs. If the neoplasm extends within one inch of the anus, it will be
-necessary to remove the entire lower portion of the rectum. If, however,
-more than one inch of perfectly healthy tissue remains below, this
-should always be preserved. Having removed the neoplasm, if one inch or
-more of healthy gut remains above anus, one should unite the proximal
-and distal ends either by Murphy button or end-to-end suture.
-
-All oozing is checked by hot compresses, and the concavity of the sacrum
-is packed with a large mass of sterilized gauze, the end of which
-protrudes from the lower angle of the wound. This serves to check the
-oozing, and also furnishes a support to the bone-flap after it has been
-restored to position. Finally the flap is fastened in its original
-position by silk-worm gut sutures, which pass deeply through the skin
-and periosternum on each side of the transverse incision. Suturing the
-bone itself is not necessary. The lateral portion of the wound is closed
-by similar sutures down to the level of the sacro-coccygeal
-articulation; below this it is left open for drainage (Tuttle, Diseases
-of Rectum, Page 829-1903).
-
-
-
-
- REPORT OF A CASE OF GANGRENOUS
- APPENDICITIS, FROM THE SERVICE
- OF PROF. R. WINSLOW.
-
- BY C. C. SMINK, '09,
- _Senior Medical Student_.
-
-
-In selecting a case I have not taken one that is a surgical curiosity,
-or at all an unusual one, but I have taken this because it is just in
-these cases that a doubt sometimes exists as to the treatment when
-diagnosed, and often the condition of the appendix and surrounding
-peritoneum is in doubt, even if a diagnosis of trouble originating in
-the appendix is made.
-
-_History of Case_--Patient, a boy, L. W., age 9 years, schoolboy;
-admitted December 26, 1908, with a diagnosis of appendicitis.
-
-_Family History_--Parents well; one brother died in infancy, cause
-unknown; two brothers living and well; only history of any family
-disease is tuberculosis in one uncle; no rheumatism, syphilis, gout,
-haemophilia or other disease bearing on the case.
-
-_Past History_--Measles at 5 years, with uneventful recovery;
-whooping-cough at 6, no complications; badly burned two years ago; has
-had "indigestion" (?) since he was 3 years old; pain but no tenderness
-during these attacks; treated by different physicians and got better for
-a time; no history of scarlet fever, influenza, pneumonia, typhoid or
-other disease of childhood.
-
-_Habits_--A normal child.
-
-_Present Illness_--On 20th of December, 1908, patient came home from
-church complaining of pains in the right side. This was Sunday. Next day
-he complained of severe pain all over abdomen, but on Tuesday these
-became localized in the right lower quadrant of the abdomen. Had some
-fever. Bowels constipated. No nausea or vomiting. There was a localized
-tenderness in the right lower quadrant from the start. Pains got better
-on Friday, but temperature and pulse still stayed up, and patient came
-into hospital on Saturday, December 26. The unusual feature was that
-there was no nausea or vomiting. It is also to be noted that the pain
-subsided suddenly on the 24th. The child entered hospital on the 26th,
-and on entrance the whole right side was rigid, while the left side was
-comparatively soft. A lump could be felt in the appendical region, the
-centre of which was above McBurney's point. Temperature was 99 and pulse
-78. The leucocyte count, however, was 30,200; urine negative.
-
-Child was put to bed; an ice cap placed on the abdomen. Liquid diet. The
-next day, December 27th, leucocytes stood at 35,200. Temperature
-unchanged, but the pulse had risen to 110 beats. A hypodermic of
-morphine and atropine was given, and patient taken to the operating
-room, anesthetized, and abdomen cleaned for an aseptic (if possible)
-operation.
-
-Prof. Winslow made an incision in the abdominal wall, well out toward
-the crest of the ilium, using the gridiron incision. The caecum was
-found and pulled over toward the middle line, and in looking for the
-appendix, which was supposed to be behind the caecum, a great quantity
-of pus was found. This nasty smelling, grayish pus welled up into the
-wound and was sponged away. Several pieces of mucous membrane and
-presumably the tip of the appendix were found in the pus. Also several
-faecal secretions. The pus was sponged away and carefully a search was
-made for the appendix, or rather what remained of it. It was found tied
-down by adhesions and dissected loose. It broke away in pieces, and it
-was unnecessary to ligate any of the arteries of the meso appendix. The
-stump of the appendix close to the caecum was crushed, cauterized and
-ligated. No attempt was made to invert it, as the tissues would not
-stand it. The pus cavity was found to extend up behind the caecum and
-over toward the median line for some distance. The puncture, which I
-will refer to later, was then made in the right lumbar region, and two
-cigarette drains were introduced extending clear back into the bottom of
-the abscess cavity. Then a gauze drain was introduced into the anterior
-wound, and this sutured up. The wound was then dressed and the patient
-taken to the ward. Recovery from anesthetic without ill effects.
-
-The next morning the patient was unable to pass his water, and had to be
-catheterized. Aside from this no ill effects were seen, and his
-temperature and pulse remained practically at the same place. At the end
-of 48 hours the drains and dressings were changed and the patient was
-doing well and the wound draining profusely. At no time was the bed
-elevated and at no time was a stimulant administered, with the exception
-of a hot normal salt enema on the day following the operation. Several
-times during his stay a dose of castor oil was given, but no other
-medication was necessary. As the dressings were reapplied and drains
-introduced daily the wounds were found to be granulating up, and
-gradually these closed, first the one in the lumbar region and then the
-one in the abdomen. By the tenth day a normal temperature was present,
-and he sat up on the twelfth.
-
-The child went on to an uneventful recovery, and went home on January
-21st fully cured.
-
-This was undoubtedly one of those cases of gangrenous appendicitis
-where, owing either to the intensity of the infection or to a thrombosis
-of the vessels supplying the appendix, the vitality of the tissues is
-lost and gangrene results. Now, "even in this, the gravest form of
-appendicitis, the general peritoneal cavity is often protected against
-infection by walling off the pus, and the appendix, detached in the form
-of a slough, is often found on opening the localized abscess." But "in
-other cases there is from the beginning the symptoms of peritoneal
-sepsis and peritonitis."
-
-Now, it seems to me that a great deal depends on the kind of
-infection--or, rather, the kind of organism infecting--and often the
-difference between a localized abscess and a general peritonitis is
-really the difference between a colon and a streptococcus infection.
-Again, should a general peritonitis develop, I have noticed from a
-number of cases in the wards that the prognosis practically depends on
-the organism, although we all know that a general peritonitis is a
-mighty grave condition, no matter what it is due to.
-
-Another point in favor of the child was the fact that the gangrenous
-process seemed to start in the tip of the appendix, and it seems that
-when it starts there, there is greater likelihood of localization, and
-when it starts in the base a greater likelihood of general peritonitis.
-
-I said that there was often doubt as to the condition in the abdomen in
-these cases. Now, there can be no doubt that the two main points in the
-diagnosis of a localized abscess are tumor and an aggravation of the
-symptoms present. But this case exemplified the fact that there may be
-cases where there is no aggravation of symptoms, and in a great many
-cases it may be impossible to feel the tumor until it has become very
-large, owing to its situation, viz., post caecal. Even in this case,
-from which a great quantity of pus was evacuated, there was no absolute
-certainty of finding pus on opening the abdomen, although it was
-suspected strongly.
-
-I have seen a patient walk into the hospital on Sunday with a
-temperature of 100 and a pulse of 99, and when the abdomen was opened on
-Monday morning a most virulent form of general streptococcus peritonitis
-was found, from which the patient died the next day. It is said that it
-is much better to depend on the pulse and its variations than on the
-temperature.
-
-I would like to call attention to several points in the treatment of
-this case also.
-
-First, the place of incision was, as I said, well up towards the iliac
-crest, and not in the time-honored McBurney point. The wisdom of this is
-self-evident.
-
-Second, the care used in not breaking up the wall of the abscess formed
-by the peritoneum.
-
-Also, the fact that the appendix was carefully dissected up and tied off
-and allowed to heal by itself, obviating, as much as possible, the
-danger of a faecal fistula. The older books advised evacuating the
-abscess and leaving the appendix to slough off, and, while I have seen
-seven cases where this method was used and not a single faecal fistula,
-yet it seems to me the more rational treatment to remove the offender,
-as I have also assisted in three operations where the appendix was
-removed at the second operation. That is, an operation supposedly an
-appendectomy was done, and later, at a subsequent period, the diseased
-appendix was found still causing the same old trouble.
-
-Again, the use of the lumbar puncture, so as to drain the abscess cavity
-from its very bottom. I wonder this is not done oftener, as it appeals
-to me as being a most sensible thing.
-
-Then the abscess cavity was sponged out with gauze, and not washed out
-with the antiseptic fluid that books advise, thus spreading bacteria all
-over the peritoneal cavity, and really doing no good. Nature was allowed
-to throw off such things as she deemed necessary, an avenue of escape
-having been provided.
-
-And, lastly, the omentum was found and brought down, covering in the
-cavity as much as possible, and thus aiding in the walling off process.
-
-
-
-
- DIRECT LARYNGOSCOPY.
-
- BY RICHARD H. JOHNSTON, M. D.
-
- _Read Before the Baltimore City Medical Society,
- Section on Medicine and Surgery,
- February, 1909._
-
-
-Direct laryngoscopy, as the name implies, is the inspection of the
-larynx through a hollow tube without the use of a mirror. The
-examination is made with the patient in the sitting position, under
-local anesthesia, or in the prone position, under general anesthesia. To
-examine the larynx in the sitting position it is practically always
-necessary to give a hypodermic injection of morphia and atropia a half
-hour beforehand, to relax the muscles and to prevent excessive
-secretion. The patient is seated upon a low stool with the head extended
-and supported by an assistant. With curved forceps 20% cocaine or 25%
-alypin solution is quickly passed into the throat, anesthetizing
-pharynx, tongue and epiglottis. Jackson's slide speculum is then
-introduced and the base of the tongue, with the epiglottis, gently
-pulled forward. At this point it is usually necessary to use more
-cocaine directly in the larynx, which is introduced by means of special
-cotton carriers. In a few minutes anesthetization is complete, and the
-examination can be made at leisure. It will be found easier to inspect
-the different parts of the larynx if the head is held about halfway
-between the erect position and complete extension. In some patients with
-short, thick necks and large middle incisor teeth the slide will have to
-be removed from the speculum to enable one to see well. The examination
-in the prone position under general anesthesia is made with the
-patient's head over the end of the table supported by an assistant. The
-speculum is introduced and the base of the tongue and the epiglottis
-pulled upward forcibly. In this position direct laryngoscopy, even in
-children, is unsatisfactory, and operative procedures are well-nigh
-impossible on account of the muscular rigidity. The force required to
-lift the tissues is so great and the position of the arm is so cramped
-that it is difficult to get a clear view of the field. The difficulty
-has impressed all who have worked in this particular line. It remained
-for Dr. H. P. Mosher, of Boston, to discover a method of direct
-laryngoscopy which makes it as simple under ether anesthesia as in the
-sitting position. In April, 1908, he described in the _Boston Medical
-and Surgical Journal_ the "left lateral position" for examining the
-larynx and the upper end of the esophagus. He designed certain
-instruments which I believe are too cumbersome to meet with popular
-favor. In Mosher's position the patient lies on the table with the head
-turned toward the left until the cheek almost rests on the table; the
-chin is flexed on the chest. In our work at the Presbyterian Hospital we
-have found a modified Mosher's position and Jackson's child speculum the
-ideal combination for the examination in the prone patient. In children
-the procedure is carried out with or without anesthesia. Without
-anesthesia the head, hands and feet are held, the chin is flexed on the
-chest in a normal position by placing a pillow under the head, the
-speculum is introduced and the larynx inspected. In adults under
-anesthesia the same procedure is used, and will be found much simpler
-than the extended position. In adults, after the speculum is in
-position, if the anterior part of the larynx is not seen, gentle
-pressure on the thyroid cartilage will bring the anterior commissure
-into view. Operations can be done through the tube satisfactorily. With
-the different methods of direct laryngoscopy it is possible to remove
-any growth from the larynx.
-
-919 N. Charles Street.
-
-
-
-
- ITEMS.
-
-
-The Board of Trustees of the Permanent Endowment Fund of the University
-held its annual meeting on January 11. Judge Stockbridge was re-elected
-president and Mr. J. Harry Tregoe secretary-treasurer, and, with Dr.
-Samuel C. Chew and Judge Sams, constitute the executive committee for
-the year 1909. The funds and securities in hand total the gross sum of
-$18,635.74.
-
- -------
-
-A special meeting of the Washington Branch of the General Alumni
-Association was held at the office of the president, Dr. Monte Griffith,
-March 11, 1909, to consider the advisability of petitioning the Board of
-Regents to establish a Board of Alumni Counsellors, a paid president and
-a Board of Trustees, independent of the teaching faculties. Resolutions
-in favor of these measures were adopted.
-
- -------
-
-Dr. Louis W. Knight, class of 1866, of Baltimore, has presented to
-Loyola College a valuable collection of papal medals.
-
- -------
-
-Drs. H. O. and J. N. Reik have removed their offices to 506 Cathedral
-street.
-
- -------
-
-Drs. W. D. Scott and W. E. Wiegand attended the banquet of the Virginia
-Military Institute Alumni Association of Baltimore, held at the New
-Howard House, March 2, 1909. Dr. W. D. Scott responded to the toast "The
-Younger Generation and the Splendid Work of the Virginia Military
-Institute Today."
-
- -------
-
-Major William F. Lewis, class of 1893, U. S. A. Medical Corps, has been
-relieved from duty at Fort Thomas and ordered to sail on June 5, 1909,
-for the Philippine Islands, via San Francisco, for duty.
-
- -------
-
-Dr. Hugh A. Maughlin, class of 1864, of 121 North Broadway, an official
-in the United States Custom Service, who was assistant surgeon in the
-Sixth Maryland Regiment during the Civil War, is dangerously ill of
-pleurisy at his home. Dr. Maughlin is a member of Wilson Post, G. A. R.
-
- -------
-
-Dr. James A. Nydegger, class of 1892, past assistant surgeon, United
-States Public Health and Marine Hospital Service, has been promoted to
-the rank of surgeon.
-
- -------
-
-Dr. Eugene H. Mullan, class of 1903, assistant surgeon, United States
-Public Health and Marine Hospital Service, has been commissioned a past
-assistant surgeon, to rank as such from February 2, 1909.
-
- -------
-
-Dr. Samuel T. Earle, Jr., of Baltimore, Md., records the case of Mrs. F.
-H. D., who, the latter part of August, 1907, while eating ham, swallowed
-a plate with two false teeth. Ten days later she had a violent attack of
-pain in the abdomen, followed by a chill and fever. There was no
-recurrence of this for one and a half months. Since then they have
-recurred from time to time, but not as severe, nor have they been
-attended with chill and fever. A diagram taken of the lower abdominal
-and pelvic regions showed the plate in the sigmoid flexure of the colon,
-on a level with the promontory of the sacrum. Examination through the
-sigmoidoscope brought it into view at the point shown by the X-ray.
-There was considerable tenesmus, and the passage of a good deal of
-mucous, also a tendency to constipation. Under the influence of two
-hypodermics of morphine, gr. 1-4, hyoscine hydrobromate, gr. gr. L-100,
-and cactina, which produced satisfactory anesthesia, Dr. Earle was able
-to grasp the plate through the sigmoidoscope with a pair of long
-alligator forceps, and withdraw it immediately behind the sigmoidoscope.
-
- -------
-
-At the Conference on Medical Legislation, held in Washington, D. C.,
-January 18-20, 1909, resolutions were adopted providing for a committee
-composed of one member each from the medical departments of the Army and
-the Navy, one from the Public Health and Marine Hospital Service, one
-member from the District of Columbia and one member from the Council on
-Medical Legislation, to present to the medical profession the conditions
-under which the widow of Major James Carroll is now placed, and to
-devise such plans as might seem advisable for her relief. The following
-committee was appointed: Major M. W. Ireland, U. S. A.; Surgeon W. H.
-Bell. U. S. N.; Dr. John F. Anderson, U. S. Public Health and Marine
-Hospital Service; Dr. John D. Thomas, Washington, D. C., and Dr. A. S.
-Von Mansfelde, of Ashland, Nebraska.
-
-Mrs. Carroll has been granted a pension of $125 a month on which to
-support herself, seven young children and the aged mother of her
-husband. The house, which Major Carroll had partly paid for, is
-mortgaged for $5,000. Since the conference adjourned the medical
-officers of the Army have raised enough to pay the taxes on the house,
-one monthly note of $50 and the overdue interest on the first mortgage,
-amounting to $125. Believing that the members of the medical profession
-will wish to contribute toward a fund for the purpose of paying the
-balance due on the house, the committee requests contributions of any
-amount. They may be sent to Major M. W. Ireland, United States Army,
-Washington, D. C. The editors of THE BULLETIN sincerely hope our alumni
-will honor the memory of our most distinguished alumnus by contributing
-liberally to this most worthy cause.
-
- -------
-
-At the last regular meeting of the University of Maryland Medical
-Association, held in the amphitheatre of the University Hospital,
-Tuesday, March 16, 1909, the program was as follows: 1, "The General
-Practitioner: His Relation to His Patients, to His Fellow Practitioners
-and to the Community in Which He Lives," Dr. Guy Steele, Cambridge, Md.;
-2, "Medical Ethics," Dr. Samuel C. Chew. Dr. A. M. Shipley, the
-president, was in the chair, and called the meeting to order promptly at
-8.30 P. M. The attendance was large and appreciative, and listened to
-two remarkably able addresses. Those who had the privilege and pleasure
-of listening to the words of wisdom and advice both of Dr. Chew and Dr.
-Steele went away with a clearer conception of their duties to their
-professional brethren and the public.
-
-Immediately after the adjournment of the Medical Association the Adjunct
-Faculty, with its president, Dr. Joseph W. Holland, in the chair, held a
-very important meeting, the gist of which is as follows: Resolved by the
-Adjunct Faculty of the Medical Department of the University of Maryland
-that the Board of Regents be implored to effect such changes in the
-charter as to make possible the election of a president with a fixed
-salary, and with the duties usually associated with that office in
-standard universities, and a Board of Administrators independent of
-teaching faculties. The Adjunct Faculty also endorsed tentative plans
-looking towards the formation of an advisory board of alumni
-counsellors.
-
- -------
-
-At the meeting of the Section on Ophthalmology and Otology, Thursday,
-March 11, 1909, at the Faculty Hall, the following of our alumni read
-papers: "Rodent Ulcer of the Cornea (Ulcus Rodens Mooren), with
-Exhibition of the Case," Dr. R. L. Randolph; "Purulent Otitis Media of
-Infancy and Childhood," Dr. H. O. Reik.
-
- -------
-
-At the meeting of the Section on Neurology and Psychiatry, Friday, March
-12, 1909, the following participated:
-
-"History and Forms of Chorea," Dr. N. M. Owensby;
-
-"Etiology of Chorea, Dr. H. D. McCarty;
-
-"Treatment of Chorea," Dr. W. S. Carswell.
-
- -------
-
-The Baltimore _Star_ of March 27th, 1909, has this to say concerning
-Prof. Randolph Winslow: "Prof. Randolph Winslow, head of the Department
-of Surgery of the University of Maryland, is one of the best-known
-lecturers and demonstrators in the East. He is a close student, and has
-the faculty of impressing the young men of the University with the force
-of and practicability of his knowledge. Professor Winslow stands high in
-medical and surgical circles of the country, and ranks with the best
-surgeons." Under the caption of the leading men of Maryland _The Star_
-also included a photograph of Professor Winslow. By honoring Dr. Winslow
-_The Star_ also honors the University of Maryland, whose authorities
-feel a natural pride in the eminent position held by its professors.
-
-Dr. Fitz Randolph Winslow, class of 1906, a former resident physician in
-the University Hospital, and a resident of Baltimore, has located at
-Hinton, Virginia.
-
- -------
-
-The Phi Sigma Kappa Fraternity had an at-home Saturday, March 27, 1909.
-
- -------
-
-About sixty members of the Theta Nu Epsilon Fraternity, University of
-Maryland, attended a banquet at the Belvedere recently. It was served in
-the main hall, and the tables, which formed a semicircle, were
-beautifully decorated with trailing asparagus and cut flowers. During
-the meal a string orchestra rendered popular selections. Dr. Arthur M.
-Shipley, toastmaster, introduced Mr. Frederick W. Rankin, who made the
-address of welcome. Mr. Rankin was followed by Dr. C. H. Richards, who
-responded to the toast "Past and Present;" Dr. W. D. Scott had as his
-subject "The Fraternity Man;" Dr. R. Dorsey Coale, "The Undergraduate;"
-Dr. Randolph Winslow, "The Near Doctor;" Dr. John C. Hemmeter, "Our
-University," and Mr. C. B. Mathews, "The Ladies." The reception
-committee in charge of the arrangements was as follows: Frederick W.
-Rankin, chairman; Ross S. McElwee; John W. Robertson, John S. Mandigo,
-Arthur L. Fehsenfeld, J. F. Anderson.
-
- -------
-
-
-
-
- DEATHS.
-
-
-Dr. Joseph R. Owens, class of 1859, mayor of Hyattsville, Md., and
-treasurer of the Maryland Agricultural College, died at his home, in
-Hyattsville, March 15, 1909, after a lingering illness of six months.
-Death came peacefully, and at the bedside were his wife, who was Miss
-Gertrude E. Councilman, of Worthington Valley, Baltimore county, Md.;
-his daughter, Mrs. Geo. B. Luckey, and his son, Charles C. Owens, of New
-York. Besides these he is survived by his mother, Mrs. Percilla Owens,
-90 years of age; a son, Mr. L. Owens, of New York, and a daughter, Mrs.
-A. A. Turbeyne, of England.
-
-Dr. Owens was born in Baltimore, February 20, 1839, and was 70 years
-old. His parents removed to West River when he was seven years of age.
-When he was ten years old he entered Newton Academy, Baltimore, and in
-1859 was graduated from the Medical Department of the University of
-Maryland. Immediately after leaving the University he was appointed
-resident physician at the Baltimore City Almshouse, and served in this
-capacity to 1861, when he returned to Anne Arundel county and began
-farming on West River. In 1885 he removed to Hyattsville and accepted
-the position of clerk of the Claims Division of the Treasury Department,
-Washington. He held this office until 1890, when he was named as
-treasurer of the Maryland Agricultural College, which position he filled
-until death. For several years Dr. Owens was collector of taxes in Anne
-Arundel county. When the municipal government of Hyattsville was changed
-from a board of commissioners to a mayor and common council, Dr. Owens
-was elected councilman from the Third ward, and served with marked
-ability until May, 1906, when he was elected mayor.
-
-He was elected for three consecutive terms without opposition, and was
-foremost in every move tending to the advancement of the town. As
-treasurer of the Maryland Agricultural College he became acquainted with
-many of the leading men of the State, by whom he was held in the highest
-esteem. He was secretary of the Vansville Farmers' Club for many years,
-a director of the First National Bank of Hyattsville. Interment was in
-the cemetery adjoining Old St. James' Protestant Episcopal Church, near
-West River, Anne Arundel county. The coffin was borne from his late
-residence, Hill Top Lodge, by seven cadets of the Agricultural
-College--Cadet-Major Mayor, Captains Burrough and Jassell, Lieutenant
-Jarrell and Sergeants Freere, Saunders and Cole. A squad of 25 cadets,
-five from each class of the College, under command of Captain Gorsuch,
-escorted the body to Pinkey Memorial Church, where the Episcopal burial
-service was read by Rev. Henry Thomas, rector of St. Matthew's Parish,
-of which Dr. Owens had been registrar and a member of the vestry for
-several years. The body, preceded by the college cadets, was taken to
-the Chesapeake Beach Railway Station and shipped to Lyons Creek, and
-thence to St. James' Church. Rev. Henry Thomas officiated at the grave.
-The pall-bearers were: Messrs. Wirt Harrison, Harry W. Dorsey, E. B.
-Owens, O. H. Carr, T. Sellman Hall and E. A. Fuller. A special meeting
-of the Mayor and Common Council was held in Heptasophs' Hall March 22,
-1909, to take action upon the death of Dr. Joseph R. Owens, late Mayor
-of Hyattsville. Acting Mayor John Fainter Jr., was chairman and Town
-Clerk G. H. Carr was secretary. Former Mayor Dr. C. A. Wells eulogized
-the late Mayor, both as a public official and a private citizen. Dr.
-Joseph A. Mudd, W. P. Magruder, R. E. White, J. W. Aman and Edward
-Devlin, all members of the Council who served with Dr. Owens, and R. W.
-Wells, M. J. Smith and S. J. Kelly, the last named as members of the
-present Council, also made appropriate addresses. It was resolved that
-in the passing away of Dr. Joseph R. Owens, Mayor of Hyattsville, we
-have lost a conscientious official, a valued associate and a personal
-friend, and the citizens of Hyattsville at large, as well as his
-official associates, have experienced a bereavement, the effects of
-which they will ever feel.
-
- -------
-
-Dr. Asa S. Linthicum, class of 1852, a former member of the Board of
-County Commissioners of Anne Arundel county, died at his home, in
-Jessup, Md., Sunday, March 28, 1909, from apoplexy, aged 78. About 25
-years ago Dr. Linthicum retired from the active practice of medicine to
-engage in iron ore mining.
-
-Dr. Linthicum's wife, who died about five years ago, was Miss Nettie
-Crane, of Clifton Springs, N. J. Interment was in Loudon Park Cemetery,
-Baltimore.
-
- -------
-
-Dr. John Bailey Mullins, class of 1887, of Washington, D. C., a member
-of the American Medical Association and the American Society of
-Laryngology and Otology, formerly of Norfolk, Va., died at his home, in
-Washington, D. C., from cerebral hemorrhage, February 11, 1909, aged 42.
-
-Resolutions on the death of Dr. John Bailey Mullins:
-
-WHEREAS, It has been God's purpose to suddenly call hence one of our
-most useful and beloved members; be it
-
-_Resolved_, By the Washington Branch of the General Alumni Association
-of the University of Maryland, that we are deeply grieved by the
-premature death of our honored associate. By his death the public,
-especially those worthy of charity, whom he was ever ready to serve,
-have lost a most useful citizen, the medical profession a skilled and
-painstaking physician and surgeon, and the University of Maryland an
-able and active worker. And be it further
-
-_Resolved_, That the sympathy of this Association be extended to his
-daughter, whom he loved before all else on earth, and to whom he was
-ever a dutiful father. And be it further
-
-_Resolved_, That these resolutions be spread upon the minutes of our
-Association and a copy of the same be sent to the parent Alumni
-Association in Baltimore.
-
-Committee--I. S. Stone, William L. Robbins, Harry Hurtt, Monte Griffith,
-president; W. M. Simpkins, secretary.
-
- -------
-
-Dr. Samuel Groome Fisher, class of 1854, of Port Deposit, Md., died at
-the home of his son, in Port Deposit, February 22, 1909, aged 77. For
-more than 50 years Dr. Fisher was a practitioner of Chestertown, Md.
-
- -------
-
-Dr. Charles Brewer, class of 1855, of Vineland, N. J., died at his home,
-in Vineland, March 3, 1909, aged 76. From 1858 to the outbreak of the
-Civil War he was a member of the Medical Corps of the Army, and during
-the war a surgeon in the Confederate States service. Under President
-Cleveland he was postmaster at Vineland, N. J., and resident physician
-at the State Prison, Trenton, from 1891 to 1896.
-
- -------
-
-Dr. William F. Chenault, class of 1888, of Cleveland, N. C., a member of
-the Medical Society of the State of North Carolina, died at his home, in
-Cleveland, N. C., February 24, 1909, from cerebral hemorrhage, aged 46.
-
- -------
-
-Dr. James B. R. Purnell, class of 1850, of Snow Hill, Maryland, died at
-his home, in Snow Hill, March 7, 1909, from senile debility, aged 80. He
-was vice-president of the Medical and Chirurgical Faculty of Maryland in
-1900-1901, formerly physician to the county almshouse and health officer
-of Worcester county.
-
- -------
-
-Dr. Benjamin Franklin Laughlin, class of 1904, of Kingwood, West
-Virginia, died at the home of his father, in Deer Park, Md., from
-paralysis, March 9, 1909, aged 31.
-
-
-=IN PNEUMONIA= the inspired air should be rich in oxygen and
-comparatively cool, while the surface of the body, especially the
-thorax, should be kept warm, lest, becoming chilled, the action of the
-phagocytes in their battle with the pneumococci be inhibited.
-
- _Antiphlogistine_
-
- (_Inflammation's Antidote_)
-
-applied to the chest wall, front, sides and back, hot and thick,
-stimulates the action of the phagocytes and often turns the scale in
-favor of recovery.
-
-=Croup.=--Instead of depending on an emetic for quick action in croup,
-the physician will do well to apply Antiphlogistine hot and thick from
-ear to ear and down over the interclavicular space. The results of such
-treatment are usually prompt and gratifying.
-
-Antiphlogistine hot and thick is also indicated in Bronchitis and
-Pleurisy
-
- * * * * *
-
-
- =The Denver Chemical Mfg. Co. New York=
-
- * * * * *
-
-Certain as it is that a single acting cause can bring about any one of
-the several anomalies of menstruation, just so certain is it that a
-single remedial agent--if properly administered--can effect the relief
-of any one of those anomalies.
-
-¶ The singular efficacy of Ergoapiol (Smith) in the various menstrual
-irregularities is manifestly due to its prompt and direct analgesic,
-antispasmodic and tonic action upon the entire female reproductive
-system.
-
-¶ Ergoapiol (Smith) is of special, indeed extraordinary, value in such
-menstrual irregularities as _amenorrhea_, _dysmenorrhea_, _menorrhagia_
-and _metrorrhagia_.
-
-¶ The creators of the preparation, the Martin H. Smith Company, of New
-York, will send samples and exhaustive literature, post paid, to any
-member of the medical profession.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Note
-
-The original spelling and punctuation has been retained, accept for
-confirmed typos.
-
-Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.
-
-Italicized words and phrases in the text version are presented by
-surrounding the text with underscores(_).
-
-Bold words and phrases in the text version are presented by surrounding
-the text with equals sign (=).
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hospital Bulletin, Vol. V, No. 2,
-April 15, 1909, by Various
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hospital Bulletin, Vol. V, No. 2, April
-15, 1909, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Hospital Bulletin, Vol. V, No. 2, April 15, 1909
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: December 29, 2016 [EBook #53827]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOSPITAL BULLETIN, APRIL 15, 1909 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive)
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-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>This cover was produced by the Transcriber<br />and is in the public domain.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_I'>I</span>
- <h1 class='c001'>THE HOSPITAL BULLETIN</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>Published Monthly in the Interest of the Medical Department</div>
- <div>of the University of Maryland</div>
- <div class='c000'>PRICE $1.00 PER YEAR</div>
- <div class='c000'>Contributions invited from the Alumni of the University.</div>
- <div>Business Address, Baltimore, Md.</div>
- <div class='c000'>Entered at the Baltimore Post-office</div>
- <div>as Second Class Matter.</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='sc'>Vol. V</span> BALTIMORE, Md., APRIL 15, 1909 No. 2</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_II'>II</span>
- <h2 class='c003'>THE ETHICS OF THE GENERAL PRACTITIONER.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><i>An Address delivered Before the University of</i></div>
- <div><i>Maryland Medical Association,</i></div>
- <div><i>March 16, 1909</i>,</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='sc'>By Guy Steele, M. D.</span></div>
- <div>Of Cambridge, Md.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>A celebrated divine once said that the most
-difficult part of a sermon was the selection of a
-proper text. I must thank the President of
-this society for saving me this trouble. When,
-however, Webster's is consulted for a proper
-definition of the word "Ethics," and it is found
-to mean "The science of human duty," it
-would seem that he has chosen a text almost
-too comprehensive for the limits of a short
-paper, even when restricted to the "ethics of
-the medical profession." It may not be out of
-place to thank him for the honor he has conferred
-upon me by deeming one whose student
-days are scarce twelve years behind him
-worthy of presenting this subject to you, for a
-paper on this topic is almost of itself a sermon,
-and we naturally look up to those, whose many
-years of experience and works have brought
-them prominence, for instruction in morals and
-duty. Still, I take it, whether young or old, all
-of us like to preach on fitting occasions, and
-not the least part of the inspiration to effort is
-the character of the audience. My invitation
-was to read a paper before the Clinical Society,
-and incidentally I was told that some of the
-students had expressed a desire to be present.
-Little, however, did I anticipate such a flattering
-attendance from them when examination
-time so nearly approached, and it is evidence of
-a most commendable spirit when they can
-bring themselves to take even an hour of their
-most valuable time from study to devote to a
-consideration of the moral duties and responsibilities
-which shall be theirs when they shall
-have passed through the April ordeal. Much
-that I have to say tonight will be directed especially
-to them, and if they or their elders in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_III'>III</span>the profession may in the years to come look back
-upon this night with the recollection that I
-have more forcibly brought to mind some of
-the old and half-forgotten maxims and axioms
-that make for a better and purer professional
-life, I will have been more than repaid for the
-time I have expended in the preparation of this
-paper.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In discussing the ethics of the general practitioner
-towards his patient, I would have you
-remember that your first and most important
-duty is to give to those who trust you the very
-best that is in you.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>To you young men, full of enthusiasm for
-your new profession, and imbued with Utopian
-ideas of the mission which you have undertaken
-for the good of mankind, it would seem
-almost foolish for me to mention this as the
-first advice I would offer you. But I think I
-can see a smile of understanding flit across the
-faces of those who have for some years fought
-the battle of life, and who have had the wire
-edge of early ambitions and determinations
-blunted by contact with unappreciative
-patients and unworthy professional competition
-and the daily incidents of a busy life. They
-know that it is very easy to feel too tired, or be
-too busy, or have some other engrossing affair
-in mind which prevents that entire devotion to
-duty which all admit is essential to success in
-medicine. Half of success in life or in any undertaking
-is due to a successful start; therefore,
-let me ask you to firmly determine on one
-or two fixed principles, and to stick to those
-principles through thick and thin. Be fully assured
-that no halfway devotion to your profession
-will ever bring you prominence or success.
-The time-worn phrase that "Medicine is a
-jealous mistress" loses none of its truth by frequent
-repetition. Recently I saw in a prominent
-medical journal the advice given that doctors
-should take a prominent part in politics
-and bring themselves forward in other ways,
-and that thereby in some way unknown to me
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_IV'>IV</span>the glory of the profession would be enhanced,
-and much benefit result to the community. Far
-be it from me to discourage a proper civic
-spirit and a proper interest in public affairs, or
-to advise an avoidance of any duty which good
-citizenship imposes upon every honest, patriotic
-man, whatever his business or profession.
-But I take it that no more baneful, no more
-dangerous advice can be given to our young
-professional man than this. You cannot be
-successful in both politics and medicine, and
-while we can point to one member of our profession
-in the United States Senate, and to
-some notable exceptions in our own State,
-where men of our profession have, for a time,
-abandoned medicine and returned to it to win
-success, you can rest assured that the medical
-politician possesses little beyond a musty
-diploma to remind the world that he was once
-of our cult. So don't be a halfway politician
-and halfway doctor. Success in either field
-will take all of your best effort and all of your
-time.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>What I have said of politics will apply,
-though not quite so forcibly, to any other engrossing
-business or pleasure. Time forbids
-me to elaborate this idea, and in concluding it
-let me say that you cannot be a successful politician,
-merchant, sport or what not and carry
-medicine as a side line.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It may seem useless to remind you that, in
-order to give the best that is in you, you must
-keep abreast with what is new and best in professional
-literature and scientific progress. You
-all have determined to be students, and even
-those who pride themselves on having passed
-through the University without having opened
-a book have a half-formed desire to really
-know something beyond spotting a possible examination
-question, and when once examinations
-are over, and they have reluctantly withdrawn
-themselves from the delights of the city
-by gaslight for the pine woods and mountain
-trail, they will burn the midnight oil and
-browse diligently through their musty tomes.
-May I tell you that nothing is harder than to
-find time for study. Many of us, even though
-city men, with the best and latest literature at
-our elbows, are ashamed to think how thoroughly
-we abhor the sight of a medical book
-or magazine, and how easily we can persuade
-ourselves that we are too tired and stale, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_V'>V</span>so engrossed during the day with scenes of
-sickness and suffering that we must have our
-brief hours of release from duty for recreation.
-We do need our hours of relaxation and rest
-and our too infrequent holidays, and they are
-absolutely essential to good health and good
-work. Don't, however, confuse the words rest
-and relaxation with sloth and idleness, and
-don't think your professional work completed
-when your round of daily visits is done. Indeed,
-if you would know medicine you must
-woo your mistress in the small hours of the
-night, and in many of the leisure moments that
-the day may bring you.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Much has been spoken of the man who practices
-by common sense, and whose school has
-been that of observation and hard experience.
-A most worthy brother he is at times, and
-many are his friends and wonderful his success.
-But if the science of medicine is to advance,
-more is required for progress than mere
-common sense, and observation untrained and
-experience undirected and unguided by the observation
-and experience of others will rarely
-discover a new bacillus or elaborate a side
-chain theory. So, to be truly ethical in the
-duty you owe to give the best that is in you,
-you should be reading men. Take one or more
-of the medical journals. Buy for reference the
-latest and best text-books. Make the opportunity
-to read the daily papers and something of
-current literature. A well-rounded man can
-afford to do nothing less. Besides the information
-you obtain, it pays in the respect of the
-community to have the reputation of being
-posted in your profession. Often the country
-man simply hasn't time at home to read. A
-busy life, with its miles upon miles of dusty
-roads to travel, precludes all chance for the
-easy chair. Then cultivate the habit of reading
-while driving. Many are the useful and happy
-hours I have spent in my carriage with my
-journals and magazines. I am frank to say
-that, but for this habit, I never could have
-found time for one-half of the reading I have
-done. Last year I was somewhat amused
-when a most worthy, well-educated and well-posted
-man summed up his opinion of another
-by saying that he was one of those who read
-magazines in his carriage. If I mistake not,
-this indictment was brought against the late
-Dr. Miltenberger, who as a young and busy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_VI'>VI</span>man was forced to form this habit, and I could
-but think that, could I die with half the honor
-and respect and love that were his, I could
-plead guilty to even this mark of devotion to
-my profession and desire to advance in it.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Would you be ethical in giving the best that
-is in you to your patients, you must give ungrudgingly
-of your time. This may again seem
-a useless piece of advice, and yet almost all of
-us are familiar with the man whose motto is
-"Veni, Vidi, Vici"--"I came, I saw, I conquered."
-This intuitive diagnostician is by no
-means a myth. The man who comes in a rush
-and goes in a rush, and who, with pencil in one
-hand and prescription pad in the other, feels
-the pulse while the thermometer is under the
-tongue; who sees at a glance, without necessity
-of personal or family history or of physical
-examination, just what is the matter, and who,
-giving four or five prescriptions, rushes out,
-trusting that something in his shotgun therapy
-may hit the enemy. Perhaps the next day he
-prescribes four or five more remedies or combination
-of remedies, and should the patient begin
-to improve, prides himself that he has made
-and confirmed a diagnosis by his experimental
-therapy. Is it necessary for me to say that no
-ethical man with any regard for the rights of
-his patients and his obligation to his profession
-can really practice medicine in this manner?
-The plea that you are too busy to give the
-proper time to your cases is no justification for
-your neglect. Anything less than a careful inquiry
-into family and personal history, followed
-by a painstaking and thorough physical
-examination, is unjust to your patient and unjust
-to yourself. No ethical man can give the
-best that is in him by doing less than this. If
-you haven't the time to do your work thoroughly,
-make a clean breast of the matter and
-take fewer cases. But you will say that a man,
-even in large practice, cannot afford to give
-any of it up. He needs every dollar that honestly
-comes his way, and to say that he hasn't
-time for his work is only another way of throwing
-practice into the hands of a rival. This is,
-indeed, a proposition hard to solve, as most of
-us do need every dollar that honestly comes
-our way; but if our work is only half done, if
-we have neglected some important point in diagnosis,
-and thereby omitted some equally important
-measure in treatment, have our dollars been
-honestly earned? Let us start out with and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_VII'>VII</span>carry in mind this axiom of a truly ethical life,
-that success in medicine cannot be measured
-by commercial success; that, while no sensible
-man can neglect the business side of his vocation,
-or refuse to demand and collect just compensation
-for his service, such compensation
-cannot be measured in dollars and cents alone;
-that a good conscience and whole-souled devotion
-to duty, giving ungrudgingly of the very
-best that is in you to those that have confided
-in you, will be your very best asset when the
-final account is made up.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>May I impress the fact upon you that an ethical
-man, with a just appreciation of his duty
-to his patients, can never be a vendor of patent
-or unofficial medicines. Indeed, I would be
-lacking in my duty if, with the opportunity this
-paper offers me, I did not, from the standpoint
-of experience, impress upon you with all of the
-force at my command the necessity of being
-wary of the detail man and the alluring advertising
-literature with which your mail will be
-flooded. You will scarcely have opened your
-office, and be waiting with what patience you
-can command that rush of the halt, the lame
-and the blind to which you feel that your talents
-entitle you, before the suave detail man,
-having heard of the new field, puts in his appearance.
-What you lack in therapeutic experience
-he can supply you by drawing liberally
-on the experience of others who have
-worked little less than miracles in an adjoining
-town by the use of his pills and potions, his
-elixirs and tinctures. You will find him smooth
-and oily, placid and plausible. He knows his
-story well, and even by his much speaking can
-almost persuade you that what you knew, or
-thought you knew, or what you had recently
-been taught, were all out of date; that by some
-stroke of genius the chemist of his house had
-discovered some way by which compatibles
-would combine with incompatibles into the formation
-of a new and staple mixture, possessing
-all of the virtues and none of the defects of its
-original constituents, rendering chloral as
-soothing as the strings of a lute and as harmless
-as the cooing of a dove, extracting from
-cod-liver oil every disagreeable feature and
-leaving nothing but its supposed virtues behind.
-He will show you the short road to fortune
-and success. Treat him kindly; the ethical
-man should not be rude, and brusqueness is
-not a sign of Roman honesty or virtue. Be assured
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_VIII'>VIII</span>he feels his position keenly, and is dreading
-the catechism which will sooner or later
-display his ignorance of everything but the
-story that has been drilled into him like a
-parrot.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There has been no greater shame in our profession
-than the influence these men and their
-houses have exercised, and incidentally the indorsements
-and recommendations that
-thoughtless men have furnished them. The
-blame is all ours, and we cannot shun it. We
-pride ourselves on our scientific attainments;
-that we take nothing for granted; and, now
-that the age of empiricism has passed, we accept
-nothing that does not bear the stamp of
-scientific approval. And yet, before the campaign
-of the American Medical Association and
-the revelations of Collier's and the Ladies'
-Home Journal, we accepted our treatment from
-the hands of the manufacturing houses, and
-dosed our patients with nostrums about which
-we knew nothing except the statements of
-those whose sole purpose it was to sell. There
-are few of us who have been many years in
-practice to whom a blush of shame does not
-come at the recollection of our gullibility and
-our guilty innocence. Can any man deem it
-ethical to give even to a good dog something
-about which he was totally ignorant? And yet
-this is just what we were doing. A short time
-ago a particularly shrewd detail man was discussing
-this very point with me, and claiming
-that, as the formula was now required by law
-to be printed in each bottle and package, this
-most formidable objection could not now hold
-good. Handing me a bottle of his patent cure-all,
-he glibly called my attention to the six or
-seven ingredients, with the amount of each
-contained in the fluid ounce. Among other
-potent quantities I can recall 1-48 gr. of morphia
-and 1-240 gr. of strychnia. The dose was
-a teaspoonful three times a day. Any man can
-imagine the more than homeopathic effect of
-1-48 gr. of morphia divided into eight doses.
-These well-known and well-tried drugs were
-not, however, the life of the nostrum, and presently
-we came to the twenty minims to the
-fluid ounce of the fluid extract of the drug from
-which the remedy derived its name. Something
-I had never heard of. Something unlisted in
-the U. S. P. Something discovered and owned
-and controlled by this house alone. As my ignorance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_IX'>IX</span>became more apparent his eloquence
-increased, and I have no doubt that a few years
-ago, before my moral conscience had become
-aroused to the therapeutic sin of prescribing
-something whose botanical family, whose
-chemical formula, and even whose physiological
-effects were totally unknown to me, I would
-gladly have accepted a sample and would have
-tried it on some poor soul too poor to pay
-for a prescription. It is nothing short of a
-shame to think of what we have done in this
-line. The sin has been one of carelessness and
-laziness rather than of ignorance. Here we
-had ready to hand some remedy, beautiful to
-the eye, palatable to the tongue; then why take
-the time and trouble to bother about constructing
-a formula of our own when someone else
-of equal experience had constructed one for
-us? I am ready to thank God that most of
-these nostrums are as harmless as they are
-beautiful, and, while I may not have done good,
-I rarely did harm by their use. I am not discussing
-the opium and cocaine laden classes. I
-wish to emphasize incalculable harm that must
-result to the physician himself who allows
-someone to do his thinking for him. I am also
-referring to the attitude of the ethical man to
-his patient, and beg to ask if we are doing even
-part of our duty when we are doing no harm.
-Allow me to conclude this topic by asking you
-to spend an hour some day in casually glancing
-over (a deep study would fully repay you) the
-pages of the U. S. P., or a list of the remedies
-that have in one year received the sanction of
-the Council on Pharmacy of American Medical
-Association. If you don't find enough drugs
-and combinations to meet every case and every
-conceivable situation, you had better desert
-practice and exploit some wonderful cure-all
-as a detail man.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If we, as physicians, had nothing but our
-duty to our patients to consider, and incidentally
-our own profit and glory, the practice of
-medicine would soon degenerate into a mere
-trade. I may even say that, had we nothing
-but the promptings of our consciences to keep
-us in the straight and narrow path, if we had
-nothing but the knowledge of work well done,
-and if the desire and determination to give the
-best that is in us were our only incentives to an
-ethical life, the profession would be so beset
-by the temptations of commercialism, and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_X'>X</span>notoriety and prominence which commercial
-success brings, that the halls of Esculapius
-would soon need a scouring and purging greater
-than Hercules gave the Augean stables. Despite
-the high incentive to all that is best and
-purest in life which our noblest of callings
-should beget in us, physicians are only human,
-and human weakness, like disease, is no respecter
-of persons or of callings. It may have
-been that the medical fathers, with a knowledge
-of the temptations to which they were
-subjected, and a desire to save others from the
-pitfalls which beset their paths, were imbued
-with a determination to place their profession
-on a higher plane than others; or it may have
-been the natural evolution which inevitably resulted
-from and followed the promptings of
-man to help his fellow-man, to devote himself
-to the relief of pain and sickness, to sacrifice
-his comfort and ease and almost every pleasure
-in order that others might have ease of body
-and peace of mind and soul, which from the
-earliest days have placed medicine as a profession
-apart, and have imposed upon those who
-have entered its ranks certain standards of conduct
-and insisted on certain ethical relations
-which have lifted it above mere questions of
-gain and the vain acquisition of renown. We
-have been taught that Hippocrates himself was
-great not only as a physician, but greater still
-as an ethical teacher who has left with us certain
-maxims and proverbs which, though
-handed down through the ages, have lost none
-of their truth and none of their spotless morality.
-Even in the Middle Ages, when learning,
-not to say science, had sunk into such an abyss
-of ignorance that the ability to write one's
-name lifted one into the ranks of the educated,
-when human ills were relieved more often
-with the sword than with the scalpel, the leech
-was a man apart. His education, his scientific
-investigations, and even his supposed communion
-and partnership with the evil one, placed
-his on a pedestal above other professional callings.
-Then, as now, though men might scoff
-at our profession of superior knowledge and
-skill, when "pallida mors" stalked abroad or
-knocked at the hovels of the poor or palaces of
-the rich, all arose to call us blessed. It has
-been often said that, could a medical man live
-up to the ethical standards of his profession,
-his chances without creed or priest would not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XI'>XI</span>be small at the last great day. But with all of
-our high ideals we are only mortal, and we
-know and have sorrowed at the fact that many
-of our ethical standards are not lived up to, and
-that the Hippocratic law is frequently more
-honored in the breach than in the observance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We have in every community where one or
-two are gathered together in the name of medicine
-the man who is everything to your face
-and everything else behind your back; who
-damns by faint praise; who sympathizes with
-you in your sorrows and trials, who visits the
-family of the patient you have lost to assure
-them of your skill and to insist that everything
-was done that could have been done, "but"----and
-that one harmless little conjunction, meaning
-nothing in itself, is more eloquent than a
-thousand terrible adjectives or burning, blistering
-adverbs or participles. So many things
-can be said by the pious uplifting of the eyes,
-the sanctimonious upturning of the palms. He
-would not for the world leave a doubt in the
-minds of your people, and, no matter what in
-his inmost heart he thinks of your mistakes
-(from his standpoint), it is not his place to injure
-a brother, but, alas! he is not responsible
-for the unguarded tongues of his friends, and
-he usually sees that they do his work well for
-him. Often it is "if I could only have reached
-him earlier," which, being interpreted, means
-a miracle would have been wrought. Almost
-every community has its miracle worker, its
-medical resurrectionist. His cases are always
-a little worse than others, his victories a little
-more wonderful. Where you have a bronchitis,
-he has a desperate pneumonia, your transitory
-albuminuria is with him acute Bright's, and
-hopeless cases follow him to undo him, only
-to meet defeat at his skillful hands. You hear
-that Mr. A. is desperately ill with pneumonia
-on Monday, and on Friday you meet him on
-the street, looking hale and hearty, firmly believing
-that, had Dr. X. been one hour later in
-reaching him, he would ere this have been gathered
-to his fathers. Should you mildly suggest
-that some error in diagnosis might have been
-made, that even the best of us at times go
-wrong, and that resolution in true pneumonia
-could hardly be expected in four days, you will
-find that he has been prepared for you, feeling
-that Dr. X. has used some potent remedy as
-yet unknown to you and his less skillful brethren,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XII'>XII</span>and firmly convinced that your suspicions
-of his case are based upon your ignorance or
-your jealousy of poor Dr. X., who was not
-there to defend himself, who had always spoken
-so kindly of you, and had uttered nothing
-worse than the harmless little conjunction
-"but"----</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A little bragging is not a sin, and indeed is
-usually harmless, and in the long run reacts on
-the miracle worker. But the ethical man does
-frequently suffer from it, and it is a fact, absurd
-as it may seem, that the average man or
-woman would much prefer to be considered at
-death's door about three-fifths of the time--indeed,
-almost a walking Lazarus--than to be
-deemed the picture and personification of vigorous
-health. Dr. X. knows this, and plays
-upon the credulity of his patients. He frightens
-them to death's door, works a miracle, and
-has tied them to himself forever. We all have
-suffered from this, and will continue to do so
-until the little grain of truth has grown from
-the tiny mustard seed to the vigorous bush.
-Dr. X., with his faults, has his virtues. He aspires
-to be the busiest man, the richest man,
-the most popular man in his community. All
-of these ambitions, if properly guided, are
-laudable, and, indeed, while enhancing his
-power and prestige, may be redounding to the
-good of his people, for a man to be the busiest
-and most popular man in his profession must
-usually be the best posted, the most highly educated,
-the hardest working man, not only for
-himself, but for those he serves. So, while we
-may smile at Dr. X. and his big ways, we may
-love him for his virtues and forgive his small
-faults.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>But for the man who deliberately goes to
-work to undermine another; who takes advantage
-of some temporary absence of the regular
-physician to ingratiate himself; who, appreciating
-the fact that people worried nearly to
-death by the illness of a loved one, will forget
-every obligation and desert every old friend in
-the hope that the new one may offer some encouragement
-or extend some hope, is ready for
-these emergencies. He carries satchels full of
-hope for all cases and occasions. He prescribes
-it liberally, diluted, however, to the point of despair
-because he was called in an hour too late,
-or because the case had already been damaged
-beyond his power of repair. This gentleman
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XIII'>XIII</span>advances not only by his own deceit, but uses
-the power of church, of politics, of family influence
-and social opportunity, to lift himself
-along. Verily he has his reward, but it is not
-in peace of mind, not in the honor and respect
-of his community, but the contempt of every
-honest man, be he of the profession or laity.
-Not the least of the perplexing questions which
-beset the man who is trying to lead an ethical
-life is his duty in his relation as consultant. Indeed,
-there is scarcely a situation in professional
-life that at times presents more embarrassing
-possibilities, or calls for the exercise of
-more tact. It is a pleasure to be able to bear
-witness to the ability of the man who has called
-you to his aid, to assure the family that everything
-has been done that care in diagnosis and
-skill in treatment could demand. But what of
-the cases where gross carelessness or blind ignorance
-have hastened what might easily have
-been delayed or averted? There is only one
-way here, only one duty. Treat the man as his
-carelessness or his ignorance deserves. Again,
-you are called in consultation with a thoroughly
-good man who has given ungrudgingly of the
-best that is in him. Perhaps your superior skill
-in certain lines, perhaps your superior opportunity
-to observe a certain line of cases, have
-taught you something that he has not had the
-chance to learn. As before it was your duty to
-expose the careless ignorance of one, now it is
-your place to so give your opinion and explain
-your position that no possible reflection can be
-cast upon the other. Don't approach a consultation
-with the manner of a priest of Delphi.
-Don't pose as the fountain of all wisdom and of
-all experience. Indeed, in this work you will
-be surprised how often you will learn from him
-you are called upon to assist. He has seen the
-case for days, where you can spend but minutes
-with it. It is his part to bear the blame, yours
-to share his fame should success crown your
-combined efforts.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Frequently you will be called upon when a
-resort to surgery is demanded--not so much to
-perform the operation as to give your opinion
-as to the advisability of a certain line of procedure.
-Having determined what is to be done,
-don't assume the place of prominence. You
-have little by way of reputation to gain by
-performing an operation that you were known
-to be competent to perform or you would never
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XIV'>XIV</span>have been called. Let him do the work with
-your assistance and advice. In this way you
-will have gained a fast friend for future consultations,
-and you will have enshrined him in the
-esteem and confidence of his people. Therefore,
-help him and uplift and bear witness to his
-worth, and don't humiliate him by your airs
-and assumed superiority.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As a last word, don't consult with an unworthy
-man, for be assured that your reputation
-is worth more to you than any consultation
-fee, however badly you may think you
-need it.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The question of fees is one that must be considered.
-We hate to think of the combination
-of medicine and money, and our patients abhor
-it even more. The days once were when only the
-sons of the rich sought the liberal professions.
-It was thought unworthy in the days of the dim
-ages for a pupil of Esculapius to charge for his
-services. Any remuneration that came to him was
-an offering of gratitude--indeed an honorarium
-which might be tendered or withheld at the will
-of the patient. A truly noble conception this,
-that the good we offered was beyond a mere
-question of price. Equally comforting was the
-belief that the ill which resulted despite our best
-efforts was no reflection on our skill, but an evidence
-of the wrath of the Gods. Would that we
-were as near Olympus now as then, and that the
-Gods walked with men to reward the worthy and
-punish the unjust. Would also that the manners
-and costumes and climate of Ancient Greece were
-still with us, so that man need take little heed of
-raiment beyond a robe and sandals; that he required
-no expensive outlay for instruments, no
-intricate electric outfit, and no automobile. What
-a life ours would be if now as then our grateful
-patients sought us, and we passed our many
-hours of leisure in eloquent discussion or in lazy
-lounging amid the leafy groves or shaded porticos
-of the temples! But the times have
-changed, and we have changed with them, and
-abhor as we will the combination of medicine
-and money, we are forced to take thought of the
-morrow and to spend many, many anxious moments
-in this thought and in trying to evolve
-ways and means by which a balance can be maintained
-between the honoraria of patients, both
-grateful and ungrateful, and the claims of persistent
-creditors. Perhaps it is best thus, as the
-average man needs some incentive to good work
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XV'>XV</span>beyond the acquisition of honor and glory. An
-axiom in the question of fees is this, that in order
-to be respected we must respect ourselves, and
-no one can respect himself unless he holds his
-calling above a trade and bases his charges upon
-this feeling of respect for himself and his profession.
-This axiom should be held in mind in
-arranging any fee table, and should be insisted
-upon in our settlements with those who think a
-doctor's bill should be discounted from one-quarter
-to one-half. I have often wondered how
-this right to a discount in a doctor's bill ever got
-such a firm hold in the public mind. Perhaps the
-city man cannot appreciate this fact like his
-country brother. The poor, honest old farmer,
-part of the bone and sinew of the land, expects
-the highest cash price for everything that he sells.
-If anybody has ever heard of one who when ten
-barrels of corn at $3.50 per barrel comes to $35,
-offering to take $25 for his bill, he should corral
-and cage this rara avis. But hundreds of us
-from the rural districts have been deemed mean
-and close-fisted and extortionate because we
-gently insist that $35 worth of professional services
-rendered are worth $35 and not $25.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This is largely our own fault, for so many of
-us present a bill in one hand and an apology in
-the other. We collect our bills not as if they
-were our just dues, but with a half-hearted insistence,
-inducing our debtor to believe that we
-have scruples ourselves as to the value of our
-services, and that a liberal discount from the face
-of the bill will about bring us to a fair settlement.
-It will be better for all--for patient as
-well as physician--to realize that the "science of
-human duty" implies a duty to oneself as well as
-a duty to the public, and that a small proportion
-of the charity of our profession should begin at
-home. To the young men I would especially
-give this advice: Having settled on a fair and
-honest fee for your services, do not depart from
-this fee. With us, as a rule, prosperity in the
-form of a numerous clientage comes sooner than
-to the other professions. You will not long have
-opened your office before you will be surprised
-at the number who demand your services. There
-will be no doubt of the demand, for those who
-pay the least invariably demand the most. Don't
-turn them away, for if you properly employ your
-time, you will gain in experience and occasionally
-a dollar or two. You will soon be enlightened as
-to your popularity, for the first pay day will send
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XVI'>XVI</span>most of them to another and it is presumed easier
-man. Many of those who stick will tell you that
-Dr. ---- never charged but 50 cents a visit, when
-the regular fee is $1.00. Dr. ---- will vigorously
-deny this and produce his books to prove his
-truth. Here is everything plain before you.
-Every visit is listed at the established figure. You
-will rarely see his cash book, for then the whole
-transaction would be plain, and you would discover
-the simple manner by which in every community
-some supposedly ethical man is supplanting
-his truly ethical brother by charging full fees
-and settling for half.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. ---- will cut 50 cents or a dollar from the
-established fees for out-of-town work, and immensely
-increase his practice by it. For be it
-understood the bone and sinew of the land dearly
-love the wholes and halves, and will flock to sell
-in the dearest and pay in the cheapest market.
-Don't envy this man his prosperity and, above
-all, don't follow in his footsteps. Bide your
-time with the assurance that the man who charges
-$1.00 for $2.00 worth of service rarely gives
-more than a dollar's value, and that when a real
-emergency arises and a capable, honest man is
-demanded, one who respects himself and his calling,
-if you have prepared yourself and are known
-to give the best that is in you, the cheap man will
-go to the wall and your merit will receive its reward.
-If by chance any of you have not seen
-Dr. McCormick's paper on this question of fees
-and collections, let him by all means find the
-proper A. M. A. Journal and read it. It is a
-classic worth any man's time and attention. In
-concluding this subject, let me endorse what he
-says about the cheap man, the price-cutter.
-Whatever his charge may be, he is usually getting
-full value for his services. Realizing his
-lack of education or ability or temperament, or
-whatever it is that puts him below his professional
-competitor, he cuts his fees in order to live.
-It is not our place to meet his competition, but to
-pity him, to extend to him the helping hand, to
-endeavor to elevate him to our standard, and
-never to lower ourselves to his.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I have only a few words to say on the subject
-of professional confidences. So sacred is the relation
-between the physician and patient regarded
-that the courts will not compel a physician, while
-on the witness stand and under oath, to tell the
-truth, and not only the truth, but the whole truth,
-to reveal what is imparted to him in confidence
-by his patient.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_XVII'>XVII</span>If in this exalted function of doing justice between
-man and man the courts will not compel
-the recital of some important piece of evidence,
-how carefully should we regard our professional
-relation, and see to it that neither in strict confidence
-or in idle gossip do we betray the secrets
-that suffering man has confided in us.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It may be somewhat out of place in a paper
-dealing with "The Ethics of the General Practitioner"
-to speak of the tendency, or perhaps
-better, the half-formed determination of the majority
-of every class to be specialists. I must
-confine myself to the predilection of the average
-medical student for surgery. It was so in my
-day, and I suppose it is so now, that almost 75
-per cent. of the graduating classes are thoroughly
-satisfied that the end and aim of medicine is surgery;
-that practice and the less spectacular
-branches are parts of the profession essential to
-it as a whole, and fitted for those who intend to
-lead the plodding life, but too slow and too prosaic
-for the man bursting with the knowledge of
-his own brilliancy and his own special fitness.
-There is no question but that this tendency has
-done much to lower the average fitness of many
-classes. Men become listless and careless,
-neglecting everything but their hobby, and while
-the surgical amphitheatre is crowded, the medical
-clinics will be shunned, even deserted were it not
-that the sections are such that the absentees can
-be spotted and warned. There is no question
-also but that indifference to everything but surgery
-is responsible for many of the failures before
-the State Examining Boards. We must
-have surgeons, and they must begin their training
-in medical schools, and it is not my purpose
-to discourage earnest work and honest effort to
-this end. I wish, however, to say that every
-ethical specialist needs a thorough grounding in
-the general branches of medicine, and he should
-not in his student days neglect the other essentials
-to a well-rounded man. Most heartily do I
-wish to condemn the careless, happy-go-lucky
-manner in which so many men totally unprepared
-and totally unsuited by temperament for
-this branch "rush in where angels fear to tread."
-I wish especially to draw your attention to the
-fact that there is a vast difference between the
-operator and the surgeon. Almost any young
-man with a disregard of the sight of blood, with
-nerves unaffected by human suffering and a heart
-untouched by a knowledge of his power to do
-harm, can in six months' practice on the cadaver
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XVIII'>XVIII</span>learn to cut, to sew and to ligate with neatness
-and despatch. Indeed, there may be many before
-me of the student body whose young and nimble
-fingers could teach dexterity to the best surgeons
-of the city. Very many with no pretense to this
-dexterity, and no equipment but a superabundance
-of assurance, graduate as surgeons and
-assume and aspire to a position of prominence
-that it has taken the true surgeon years of the
-hardest, closest, most untiring study, observation
-and work to reach. We are told as an excuse for
-this remarkable evolution from the student to the
-surgeon that the young man of today is taught
-so much more than the old men were; that the
-very manner of teaching, the equipment of the
-schools and the superior requirements for matriculation
-cannot but turn out better posted and
-more competent men. There is much truth in
-this. There is much truth also in the fact that
-while more is taught, more, infinitely more, is
-demanded of the student, and the knowledge that
-would have secured him a diploma fifty years ago
-will now scarcely carry him through his freshman
-year.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>We also hear that "I want to be a surgeon,
-because surgery accomplished positive results."
-This is very true also, and it is evident that if you
-amputate a leg your patient will be minus a member.
-Don't lose sight of another fact, however,
-that if without being competent to meet any unforeseen
-emergency that may arise, you lightly
-open the abdominal cavity, you will have a positive
-result in the shape of your own little private
-graveyard. The newly graduated surgeon is not
-as dangerous as the man who left medical school
-years ago, before the students received one-third
-of the surgical training that they do now. Many
-of these men have not taken a post-graduate
-course, have never been associated with a hospital,
-nor have they had even an opportunity for
-moderate surgical observation; and yet they are
-attempting to do the work that only a skilled
-specialist should undertake. I am not speaking
-of emergency surgery for which any man should
-try to prepare himself, and be brave enough to
-undertake when human life is at stake. I am referring
-to operations of election when the services
-of a competent man can be secured. The point
-is just this, gentlemen, that medicine as a science
-is the result of evolution and not the creation of
-some brilliant brain; that what has been done in
-it has been accomplished not so much by inspiration
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XIX'>XIX</span>as by close plodding work, exhaustive experiment
-and continual observation; that surgery
-as one of its branches cannot be mastered in the
-four years of student life, but that to be surgeons
-you must be workers and observers. It will not
-do to settle the matter by saying that a man must
-make a start. This truth is too self-evident to
-be smart, nor is it entirely convincing. An
-answer equally true will be that you will not
-allow the embryo surgeon to start on you, and
-before you put yourself or your wife or your
-mother in his hands you will demand that he possess
-some other qualification for his specialty
-besides his conceit, his gall and his need of the
-fee. There may be some exceptions where the
-man is born and not made, but I beg to assure
-you that the surgeon rarely springs full-fledged
-and fully fitted from the brain of Minerva.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Our profession is nothing if not altruistic. It
-demands daily and hourly more of self-sacrifice,
-more of self-devotion, than any secular calling.
-Indeed, the comparison is often drawn between
-the nobility and necessity of the duties which we
-perform and those of him who by divine inspiration
-and laying on of hands has been called to
-succor the diseased soul. It is not my place nor
-is it my purpose to enter into a discussion of this
-point, and I mention it only to show that we are
-marked men in every community; that we are
-placed on a higher plane and that more is expected
-of us than of our brethren of the other
-liberal professions. This, indeed, is right, for no
-man, the priest possibly excepted, enters into
-such intimate relations with his people. He is
-ever present with them to share their sorrows
-and their joys, and in his position of family
-friend and family confessor it is his place to
-bind and salve wounds more deadly than those
-made by the hand of man. It is a popular impression
-that this close relationship between the
-physician and his people is one evolved by the
-brain of the novelist or one possessed by that
-most beloved, but now extinct, old family physician.
-Let us get this impression from our minds
-and let us realize that our duties, our responsibilities
-and our relationship to those we serve are
-just the same, are just as close, and are just as
-engrossing as they were when that dear old patriarch
-of the profession made his rounds, scolding
-some, chiding others and advising all to better,
-purer and nobler lives. Changed as our relationship
-to the community may be in some respects
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XX'>XX</span>by the translation of many of the brightest and
-best of our cult into the ranks of the specialist,
-it is still and always will be the general practitioner
-who is looked up to as "the physician,"
-and by his work in professional and private life
-our profession will be judged.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>In the beginning of my paper I stated I could
-do little more than rehearse to you some of the
-old axioms and maxims that have been handed
-down to us for generations. I am aware that I
-have taught you nothing new tonight, and that I
-have not tapped that fountain of inspiration from
-which genius gushes in poetic or oratorical
-streams. I trust I may have convinced you that
-it is not amiss for us at times to hold close communion
-with our souls, and to take stock of our
-moral and professional assets. The further I
-have advanced the more fully I have realized
-how impossible it is to evolve new ideas or elaborate
-new creeds to supersede those by which the
-fathers lived and died and earned honor for
-themselves and our profession.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>So we face today, gentlemen, just about the
-same propositions that have always been ours to
-meet, and what was ethical one hundred years
-ago is ethical now.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The science of human duty simply demands
-that you be honest to yourselves, honest to those
-you serve; that you may look every man squarely
-in the face and not as if you feared he had heard
-something you had said behind his back. May
-I quote to you the words of the Earl of St. Vincent
-to the immortal Nelson: "It is given to us
-all to deserve success; mortals cannot command
-it."</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c003'>THE STUDY OF RECTAL SURGERY IN<br />NEW YORK CITY.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>By J. Dawson Reeder, M. D.,</span></div>
- <div><i>Lecturer on Osteology, University of Maryland,</i></div>
- <div><i>Baltimore, Md.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>Having decided to take a course in Rectal Surgery,
-I arrived in New York and matriculated
-at the New York Polyclinic Hospital on October
-1st for a course of instructions under Prof.
-James P. Tuttle, and desire to herewith describe
-briefly my reception:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Professor Tuttle is a finished surgeon of the
-old school of gentlemen, a master of his art, and,
-under all conditions and circumstances, adheres
-strictly to the ethics of the profession. I was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXI'>XXI</span>not only most cordially received by him socially,
-but was most fortunate in being honored by requesting
-me to assist him, or be present, on operations
-upon his private patients at an uptown hospital.
-This unexpected and friendly honor gave
-me an opportunity to observe closely the work of
-this great surgeon in detail, and I had the pleasure
-of witnessing every case under his care during
-my three months' visit. As to his colossal
-work on cancer of the rectum and sigmoid, his
-results are too well known for me to dwell upon
-at this time, and he has an enviable record which
-makes him the authority of this distressing malady
-which is so prevalent in the cases referred to
-the Rectal surgeon, and have so long been unrecognized
-by the general profession. I had the
-pleasure of witnessing him extirpate the rectum
-by his bone-flap and perineal route, and in some
-of these cases was honored by being his assistant.
-As to the method and technique in each of the
-above mentioned, I will endeavor to give later.
-Another very important point gained by association
-with this surgeon was, that my own theory
-as to the merits of the Whitehead operation were
-simply an endorsement of his teachings, namely,
-that this particular operation, while classical, was
-only justifiable in selected cases of hemorrhoids,
-while the Clamp and Cautery or the Ligature
-method had no restrictions as to variety or location
-of the pile mass.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Another important subject was the question of
-treatment of Tubercular fistula. For a number
-of years Dr. Tuttle said he was most discouraged
-in his results and had almost abandoned any attempt
-to cure this class of infections, but of late
-he had obtained most excellent results by introducing
-his soft flexible probe and following this
-tract with a grooved director; opening this
-throughout its entire extent, and then completely
-cauterizing at dull red heat with the actual cautery.
-This is then packed with iodoform gauze,
-and since using the cautery, his results have been
-decidedly better. Under the direction of his assistant,
-Dr. J. M. Lynch, a class of three was
-formed, with regular work and instructions in
-the dispensary of St. Bartholomew's Clinic,
-where we were given cases to diagnose and treat.
-This course consisted in introduction of proctoscope
-and sigmoidscope diagnosis of ulcerations
-specific and benign, and local treatment through
-this instrument. To the inexperienced the results
-and probabilities gained through the use of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXII'>XXII</span>this pneumatic instrument of Tuttle's, which is
-a modification of the Laws proctoscope, are surprising.
-By the electric illumination with which
-it is equipped one is able to introduce the instrument
-with absolute safety to the patient for a
-distance of 10 to 14 inches, exploring the entire
-circumference from the anus up through the sigmoid.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>My next course of instructions was under the
-direction of Prof. Samuel Gant at the New York
-Post-Graduate Medical School. Dr. Gant likewise
-was most cordial in his reception, and on
-several occasions honored me by entertainments,
-including letters of membership to his club, and
-at his home with his family. Dr. Gant, also a
-master of his art, has made a reputation of renown,
-and is a most successful operator. While
-of an entirely different character from that of
-Dr. Tuttle he is equally attractive. Dr. Gant
-argues that the majority of cases of cancer when
-seen by the specialist are too far advanced to offer
-any hope by radical operation, and generally limits
-his attempts at relief to a colostomy. As to
-the merits of this procedure, I am not sufficiently
-versed to offer criticism further than to say that
-the results of Dr. Tuttle are certainly encouraging
-to the surgeon who will undertake this ordeal
-of extirpation in hopes of eradicating the disease,
-while Dr. Gant's operation of colostomy, of
-course, is only palliative, he making no claims of
-a cure, except when the growth is seen very
-early and is freely movable; then he will extirpate.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As to the operation for hemorrhoids, Dr. Gant
-uses ligature and sterile water anesthesia in nearly
-every case, and the patient is thereby cured
-without the administration of a general anesthetic.
-The difference in the time of recovery is
-a question to be always considered, in my own
-judgment, and is as follows: Dr. Tuttle uses
-the clamp and cautery almost universally, and the
-patient is discharged within the period of one
-week, while the ligature method requires local
-treatments to the ulcerations produced by the
-sluffing of the linen threads, and takes from 10
-days to three weeks.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Constipation and Obstipation are treated surgically
-by both of these gentlemen by the operation
-of Sigmoidopexy or Colopexy, which consists
-in anchoring the gut to the abdominal parietes
-after having first stripped back the peritoneum
-over the area covered by their sutures.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_XXIII'>XXIII</span>Chronic diarrheas and Amœbic Dysentery are
-likewise treated by Appendicostomy and Caecostomy.
-The difference in this operation being that
-the former consists in delivering the appendix
-upon the abdomen and fixing the same with catgut
-sutures until the peritoneal cavity is walled
-off by adhesions, and then amputating later, so
-that the stump may be dilated to permit of regular
-colonic irrigations.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. Gant performs a similar operation, to
-which he has applied the name of Caecostomy,
-and having devised an ingenious director consisting
-of one metal rod within a tube of slightly
-larger calibre, he is able to pass the obturator
-through the ileo-caecal valve, and then, by withdrawing
-the rod or obturator, is able to pass a
-rubber catheter into the small intestine. The
-metal tube is then withdrawn and a shorter catheter
-is placed parallel with the long one, which
-necessarily is in the caput, and after placing clips
-upon each tube to prevent leakage, he is able to
-flush out both large and small bowel at desired
-intervals.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>As to the irrigations through these newly-made
-openings, it is a matter of choice with different
-operators, those in greatest favor, I think,
-being Ice Water, Aq. Ext Krameria and Quinine
-Solution.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A very interesting case brought before us by
-Dr. Tuttle was one of Specific Stricture of the
-Rectum, and the treatment anticipated is as follows:
-He performed a Maydl-Reclus Colostomy
-in the transverse colon, in order first to treat the
-ulcerations and infected area locally, and, secondly,
-so that he would have sufficient gut above
-the stricture to do a Perineal extirpation later
-and bring down new healthy intestine from the
-upper Sigmoid for a new permanent anus; then
-later he would close the artificial anus in the
-transverse colon, and his patient should have a
-perfect result. The period required for these
-three operations would cover a period of not less
-than nine months; and if after this there is not
-perfect Sphincteric action, Dr. Tuttle does a
-plastic operation to repair his sphincter.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Before continuing with a brief description of
-the technique of Extirpation as above referred
-to, I wish to herewith express my sincere gratitude
-and appreciation of the many honors and
-courtesies extended to me by these gentlemen,
-and am quite sure that the same was not all personal,
-but honor to the University of Maryland's
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXIV'>XXIV</span>Faculty of Physic, who have aided so materially
-this younger specialty by such men as Hemmeter,
-Pennington and Earle, who are constantly
-quoted by all intestinal and rectal surgeons.</p>
-<p class='c004'><span class='fss'>EXTIRPATION OF RECTUM.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The operation of removing the rectum is now
-almost two centuries old. Faget performed it in
-1739, but Listfrane first successfully extirpated
-the rectum for cancer in 1826. The results of
-the operation in nine cases were embodied in a
-thesis by one of his students (Penault, Thesis,
-Paris, 1829), and in 1833 the great surgeon himself
-gave to the world a complete account of his
-operation and method, thus establishing the procedure
-as a surgical measure. The results in
-these cases were not calculated to create any
-great enthusiasm, for the mortality was high
-owing to the lack of aseptic technique. The
-methods described in older books give us five
-varieties of operation for extirpation--the perineal,
-the sacral, the vaginal, the abdominal and
-the combined. In this paper I shall only endeavor
-to describe briefly the two methods used
-by Dr. Tuttle. Before describing these methods
-in detail it may be well to consider the preparation
-of the patient, which is practically the same
-in each. In order to obtain the best results, it is
-necessary to increase the patient's strength as
-far as possible by forced feeding for a time, to
-empty the intestinal tract of all hard and putrifying
-faecal masses, to establish as far as we may
-intestinal antisepsis and to check, in a measure,
-the purulent secretion from the growth. It requires
-from 7 to 10 days, or longer, to properly
-prepare a patient for this operation. The diet
-best calculated to obtain a proper condition of the
-intestinal tract is generally conceded to be a nitrogenous
-one. The absolute milk diet is not so
-satisfactory as a mixed diet composed of meat,
-strong broth, milk and a small quantity of bread
-and refined cereals. The patient should be fed
-at frequent intervals, and as much as he can digest.
-Along with this forced feeding one should
-administer daily a saline laxative which will produce
-two or three thin movements, and to disinfect
-the intestinal canal one should give through
-the stomach three or four times a day sulpho-carbolate
-of zinc, grs. iiss., in form of an enteric
-pill. On the day previous to the operation
-the perinaeum, sacral region and pubis should be
-shaved, dressed with a soap poultice for two
-hours, then washed and dressed with bichloride
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXV'>XXV</span>dressing, which should be retained until patient is
-anesthetized. Notwithstanding all of these preparations,
-it is impossible to obtain absolute asepsis
-of the affected area, and so many fatalities
-occur from infection that it is deemed wise by
-many surgeons to make an artificial inguinal
-anus as a preliminary procedure in all extirpations
-of the rectum.</p>
-<p class='c004'><span class='fss'>PERINEAL METHOD.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Under this method may be included certain
-operations for small epitheliomas low down in
-the rectum done through the anus. The patient
-having been properly prepared, the sphincter is
-thoroughly dilated; a circular incision through
-the entire wall of the gut is made, and the segment
-is caught with traction forceps and dragged
-by an assistant while the operator frees, by scissors
-and blunt dissection, to a point at least one-half
-inch above the cancer. The free end of the
-gut is then tied with strong tape, as the temptation
-is very great to put your finger in the bowel
-as a guide, and thereby invite infection. A deep
-dorsal incision is then made, going down to the
-right of the coccyx through the post-rectal tissue.
-The hand is then placed in the sacral fossa and
-the structures lifted out into the pelvis, after
-which this space is thoroughly packed with gauze
-to control the bleeding and hold the structures
-out of the fossa. The edges of the wound, including
-each half of the sphincter which
-has been cut posteriorly, are held by flat retractors,
-while the operator proceeds to dissect the
-anterior portion of the rectum loose from its attachments.
-A sound should be held in the
-urethra in men and an assistant's finger in the
-vagina in women to prevent wounding these organs.
-After the gut has been dissected out well
-above the tumor, it is caught by clamps and cut
-off below these. Bleeding is controlled by ligatures
-and equal parts of hot water and alcohol.
-This newly-exposed gut is then sterilized by pure
-carbolic acid and alcohol, or may be seared with
-cautery. Sometimes the peritoneum can be
-stripped off from the rectum and its cavity need
-not be opened; it is better, however, to open the
-cavity at once when the growth extends above
-this point. The peritoneum is incised, cut loose
-from its attachments close to the rectum, back to
-the mesorectum, which should be cut close to the
-sacrum, in order to avoid the inferior mesenteric
-artery. When the gut has been loosened sufficiently
-above the tumor, it may be still fastened
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXVI'>XXVI</span>by two lateral peritoneal reflections, which are
-the lateral rectal ligaments, and should be cut at
-once. The gut is then brought down and sutured
-to the anus, and the operator should proceed to
-close the peritoneum and restore the planes of
-the pelvic floor down to the levator ani by fine
-catgut sutures. After this has been accomplished,
-the anus, which is now well outside the
-operative field, should be reopened, the gauze
-removed, and the gut flushed with a solution of
-bichloride or peroxide of hydrogen. Quenu advises
-that in amputating each layer should be cut
-separately, in order to avoid hemorrhage, but
-there appears to be no advantage in this; in fact,
-we are more likely to meet with deficient blood
-supply, causing subsequent sloughing of the gut,
-than with hemorrhage. The posterior and anterior
-portions of the perineal wound are packed
-with gauze and left open to assure drainage, and
-the parts are covered with aseptic pads, held in
-position by a well-fitting "T" bandage. A large
-drainage tube is passed well up into the rectum,
-its lower end extending outside of the dressings,
-in order to convey the discharges and gases beyond
-the operative wound.</p>
-<p class='c004'><span class='fss'>TUTTLE'S BONE FLAP OPERATION.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c005'>"The Kraske Operation" is applied to various
-methods in which access to the rectum is obtained
-by removing the coccyx or cutting off
-certain portions of the lower end of the sacrum.
-They are all modifications of Kraske's original
-method, with which we are all familiar. Dr.
-Tuttle has modified this plan, as it furnishes a
-rapid and adequate approach to the rectum; it
-facilitates the control of hemorrhage and restores
-the bony floor of pelvis and attachment of the
-anal muscles, and involves injury of the sacral
-nerves and lateral sacral arteries on one side
-only. The technique which he employs is as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The patient is previously prepared as heretofore
-described, and an artificial anus established
-or not, as the conditions indicate; before the final
-scrubbing the sphincter should be dilated and the
-rectum irrigated with bichloride 1-2000 or hydrogen
-peroxide. It should then be packed with absorbent
-gauze, so that the finger cannot be introduced.
-The patient is then placed in the prone
-position on the left side, with the hips elevated
-on a hard pillow or sandbag; an oblique incision
-is made from the level of the third foramen on
-right side of sacrum down to the tip of the coccyx,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXVII'>XXVII</span>and extending half-way between this point
-and the posterior margin of the anus.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This incision should be made boldly with one
-stroke through the skin, muscles and ligaments
-into the cellular tissue posterior to the rectum;
-the rectum is then rapidly separated by the fingers
-from the sacrum, and the space thus formed
-and the wound should be firmly packed with
-sterile gauze. A transverse incision down to the
-bone is then made at a level of the 4th sacral
-foramen, the bone is rapidly chiseled off in this
-line, and the triangular flap is pulled down to the
-left side and held by retractor. At this point it
-is usually necessary to catch and tie the right
-lateral and middle sacral arteries. Frequently
-these are the only vessels that need to be tied
-during the entire operation, although if one cuts
-too far away from the sacrum, the right sciatic
-may be severed. The first step in the actual extirpation
-of the rectum consists in isolating the
-organ below the level of the resected sacrum, so
-that a ligature can be thrown around it, or a long
-clamp applied to control any bleeding from its
-walls. If the neoplasm extends above this level
-and it is necessary to open the peritoneal cavity
-to extirpate it, one should do this at once, as it
-will be found much easier to dissect the rectum
-out by following the course of the peritoneal
-folds. By opening the peritoneum and incising
-its lateral folds close to the rectum, the danger
-of wounding the ureters is greatly decreased and
-the gut is much more easily dragged down.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>When the posterior peritoneal folds or meso-rectum
-is reached, the incision should be carried
-as far away from the rectum, or, rather, as close
-to the sacrum, as possible in order to avoid
-wounding the superior hemorrhoids artery, and
-to remove all the sacral glands. The gut should
-be loosened and dragged down until its healthy
-portion easily reaches the anus or healthy segment
-below the growth. A strong clamp should
-then be placed upon the intestine about one inch
-above the neoplasm, but should never be placed
-in the area involved by it; for in so doing the
-friable walls may rupture and the contents of
-the intestine be poured out into the wound. As
-soon as the gut has been sufficiently liberated
-and dragged down, the peritoneal cavity should
-be cleansed by wiping with dry sterilized gauze
-and closed by sutures which attach the membrane
-to the gut. By this procedure the entire
-intraperitoneal part of the operation is completed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXVIII'>XXVIII</span>and this cavity closed before the intestine is incised.
-After this is done the gut should be cut
-across between two clamps or ligatures above the
-tumor, the ends being cauterized with carbolic
-acid and covered with rubber protective tissue.
-The lower segment containing the neoplasm may
-then be dissected from above downward in an
-almost bloodless manner until the lowest portion
-is reached. It is much more easily removed in
-this direction than from below upward, and there
-is less danger of wounding the other pelvic organs.
-If the neoplasm extends within one inch
-of the anus, it will be necessary to remove the
-entire lower portion of the rectum. If, however,
-more than one inch of perfectly healthy
-tissue remains below, this should always be preserved.
-Having removed the neoplasm, if one
-inch or more of healthy gut remains above anus,
-one should unite the proximal and distal ends
-either by Murphy button or end-to-end suture.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>All oozing is checked by hot compresses, and
-the concavity of the sacrum is packed with a
-large mass of sterilized gauze, the end of which
-protrudes from the lower angle of the wound.
-This serves to check the oozing, and also furnishes
-a support to the bone-flap after it has been
-restored to position. Finally the flap is fastened
-in its original position by silk-worm gut sutures,
-which pass deeply through the skin and periosternum
-on each side of the transverse incision.
-Suturing the bone itself is not necessary. The
-lateral portion of the wound is closed by similar
-sutures down to the level of the sacro-coccygeal
-articulation; below this it is left open for drainage
-(Tuttle, Diseases of Rectum, Page 829-1903).</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c003'>REPORT OF A CASE OF GANGRENOUS<br />APPENDICITIS, FROM THE SERVICE<br />OF PROF. R. WINSLOW.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>By C. C. Smink</span>, '09,</div>
- <div><i>Senior Medical Student</i>.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>In selecting a case I have not taken one that is
-a surgical curiosity, or at all an unusual one, but
-I have taken this because it is just in these cases
-that a doubt sometimes exists as to the treatment
-when diagnosed, and often the condition of
-the appendix and surrounding peritoneum is in
-doubt, even if a diagnosis of trouble originating
-in the appendix is made.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><i>History of Case</i>--Patient, a boy, L. W., age
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXIX'>XXIX</span>9 years, schoolboy; admitted December 26, 1908,
-with a diagnosis of appendicitis.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><i>Family History</i>--Parents well; one brother
-died in infancy, cause unknown; two brothers
-living and well; only history of any family disease
-is tuberculosis in one uncle; no rheumatism,
-syphilis, gout, haemophilia or other disease
-bearing on the case.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><i>Past History</i>--Measles at 5 years, with uneventful
-recovery; whooping-cough at 6, no complications;
-badly burned two years ago; has had
-"indigestion" (?) since he was 3 years old; pain
-but no tenderness during these attacks; treated
-by different physicians and got better for a time;
-no history of scarlet fever, influenza, pneumonia,
-typhoid or other disease of childhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><i>Habits</i>--A normal child.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><i>Present Illness</i>--On 20th of December, 1908,
-patient came home from church complaining of
-pains in the right side. This was Sunday. Next
-day he complained of severe pain all over abdomen,
-but on Tuesday these became localized in
-the right lower quadrant of the abdomen. Had
-some fever. Bowels constipated. No nausea or
-vomiting. There was a localized tenderness in
-the right lower quadrant from the start. Pains
-got better on Friday, but temperature and pulse
-still stayed up, and patient came into hospital on
-Saturday, December 26. The unusual feature
-was that there was no nausea or vomiting. It is
-also to be noted that the pain subsided suddenly
-on the 24th. The child entered hospital on the
-26th, and on entrance the whole right side was
-rigid, while the left side was comparatively soft.
-A lump could be felt in the appendical region, the
-centre of which was above McBurney's point.
-Temperature was 99 and pulse 78. The leucocyte
-count, however, was 30,200; urine negative.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Child was put to bed; an ice cap placed on the
-abdomen. Liquid diet. The next day, December
-27th, leucocytes stood at 35,200. Temperature
-unchanged, but the pulse had risen to 110 beats.
-A hypodermic of morphine and atropine was
-given, and patient taken to the operating room,
-anesthetized, and abdomen cleaned for an aseptic
-(if possible) operation.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Prof. Winslow made an incision in the abdominal
-wall, well out toward the crest of the ilium,
-using the gridiron incision. The caecum was
-found and pulled over toward the middle line,
-and in looking for the appendix, which was supposed
-to be behind the caecum, a great quantity
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXX'>XXX</span>of pus was found. This nasty smelling, grayish
-pus welled up into the wound and was sponged
-away. Several pieces of mucous membrane and
-presumably the tip of the appendix were found in
-the pus. Also several faecal secretions. The pus
-was sponged away and carefully a search was
-made for the appendix, or rather what remained
-of it. It was found tied down by adhesions and
-dissected loose. It broke away in pieces, and it
-was unnecessary to ligate any of the arteries of
-the meso appendix. The stump of the appendix
-close to the caecum was crushed, cauterized and
-ligated. No attempt was made to invert it, as
-the tissues would not stand it. The pus cavity
-was found to extend up behind the caecum and
-over toward the median line for some distance.
-The puncture, which I will refer to later, was
-then made in the right lumbar region, and two
-cigarette drains were introduced extending clear
-back into the bottom of the abscess cavity. Then
-a gauze drain was introduced into the anterior
-wound, and this sutured up. The wound was
-then dressed and the patient taken to the ward.
-Recovery from anesthetic without ill effects.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The next morning the patient was unable to
-pass his water, and had to be catheterized. Aside
-from this no ill effects were seen, and his temperature
-and pulse remained practically at the
-same place. At the end of 48 hours the drains
-and dressings were changed and the patient was
-doing well and the wound draining profusely.
-At no time was the bed elevated and at no time
-was a stimulant administered, with the exception
-of a hot normal salt enema on the day following
-the operation. Several times during his stay a
-dose of castor oil was given, but no other medication
-was necessary. As the dressings were reapplied
-and drains introduced daily the wounds
-were found to be granulating up, and gradually
-these closed, first the one in the lumbar region
-and then the one in the abdomen. By the tenth
-day a normal temperature was present, and he
-sat up on the twelfth.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The child went on to an uneventful recovery,
-and went home on January 21st fully cured.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>This was undoubtedly one of those cases of
-gangrenous appendicitis where, owing either to
-the intensity of the infection or to a thrombosis
-of the vessels supplying the appendix, the vitality
-of the tissues is lost and gangrene results. Now,
-"even in this, the gravest form of appendicitis,
-the general peritoneal cavity is often protected
-against infection by walling off the pus, and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXXI'>XXXI</span>appendix, detached in the form of a slough, is
-often found on opening the localized abscess."
-But "in other cases there is from the beginning
-the symptoms of peritoneal sepsis and peritonitis."</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Now, it seems to me that a great deal depends
-on the kind of infection--or, rather, the kind of
-organism infecting--and often the difference between
-a localized abscess and a general peritonitis
-is really the difference between a colon and a
-streptococcus infection. Again, should a general
-peritonitis develop, I have noticed from a number
-of cases in the wards that the prognosis practically
-depends on the organism, although we all
-know that a general peritonitis is a mighty grave
-condition, no matter what it is due to.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Another point in favor of the child was the
-fact that the gangrenous process seemed to start
-in the tip of the appendix, and it seems that when
-it starts there, there is greater likelihood of localization,
-and when it starts in the base a
-greater likelihood of general peritonitis.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I said that there was often doubt as to the condition
-in the abdomen in these cases. Now, there
-can be no doubt that the two main points in the
-diagnosis of a localized abscess are tumor and
-an aggravation of the symptoms present. But
-this case exemplified the fact that there may be
-cases where there is no aggravation of symptoms,
-and in a great many cases it may be impossible
-to feel the tumor until it has become
-very large, owing to its situation, viz., post caecal.
-Even in this case, from which a great quantity
-of pus was evacuated, there was no absolute
-certainty of finding pus on opening the abdomen,
-although it was suspected strongly.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I have seen a patient walk into the hospital on
-Sunday with a temperature of 100 and a pulse of
-99, and when the abdomen was opened on Monday
-morning a most virulent form of general
-streptococcus peritonitis was found, from which
-the patient died the next day. It is said that it is
-much better to depend on the pulse and its variations
-than on the temperature.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>I would like to call attention to several points
-in the treatment of this case also.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>First, the place of incision was, as I said, well
-up towards the iliac crest, and not in the time-honored
-McBurney point. The wisdom of this is
-self-evident.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Second, the care used in not breaking up the
-wall of the abscess formed by the peritoneum.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_XXXII'>XXXII</span>Also, the fact that the appendix was carefully
-dissected up and tied off and allowed to heal by
-itself, obviating, as much as possible, the danger
-of a faecal fistula. The older books advised
-evacuating the abscess and leaving the appendix
-to slough off, and, while I have seen seven cases
-where this method was used and not a single
-faecal fistula, yet it seems to me the more rational
-treatment to remove the offender, as I have also
-assisted in three operations where the appendix
-was removed at the second operation. That is,
-an operation supposedly an appendectomy was
-done, and later, at a subsequent period, the diseased
-appendix was found still causing the same
-old trouble.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Again, the use of the lumbar puncture, so as
-to drain the abscess cavity from its very bottom.
-I wonder this is not done oftener, as it appeals
-to me as being a most sensible thing.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Then the abscess cavity was sponged out with
-gauze, and not washed out with the antiseptic
-fluid that books advise, thus spreading bacteria
-all over the peritoneal cavity, and really doing
-no good. Nature was allowed to throw off such
-things as she deemed necessary, an avenue of escape
-having been provided.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>And, lastly, the omentum was found and
-brought down, covering in the cavity as much as
-possible, and thus aiding in the walling off process.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c003'>DIRECT LARYNGOSCOPY.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='sc'>By Richard H. Johnston, M. D.</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><i>Read Before the Baltimore City Medical Society,</i></div>
- <div><i>Section on Medicine and Surgery,</i></div>
- <div><i>February, 1909.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>Direct laryngoscopy, as the name implies, is the
-inspection of the larynx through a hollow tube
-without the use of a mirror. The examination is
-made with the patient in the sitting position,
-under local anesthesia, or in the prone position,
-under general anesthesia. To examine the larynx
-in the sitting position it is practically always necessary
-to give a hypodermic injection of morphia
-and atropia a half hour beforehand, to relax the
-muscles and to prevent excessive secretion. The
-patient is seated upon a low stool with the head
-extended and supported by an assistant. With
-curved forceps 20% cocaine or 25% alypin solution
-is quickly passed into the throat, anesthetizing
-pharynx, tongue and epiglottis. Jackson's
-slide speculum is then introduced and the base of
-the tongue, with the epiglottis, gently pulled forward.
-At this point it is usually necessary to use
-more cocaine directly in the larynx, which is introduced
-by means of special cotton carriers. In a few
-minutes anesthetization is complete, and the examination
-can be made at leisure. It will be
-found easier to inspect the different parts of the
-larynx if the head is held about halfway between
-the erect position and complete extension. In
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXXIII'>XXXIII</span>some patients with short, thick necks and large
-middle incisor teeth the slide will have to be removed
-from the speculum to enable one to see
-well. The examination in the prone position
-under general anesthesia is made with the
-patient's head over the end of the table supported
-by an assistant. The speculum is introduced and
-the base of the tongue and the epiglottis pulled
-upward forcibly. In this position direct laryngoscopy,
-even in children, is unsatisfactory, and
-operative procedures are well-nigh impossible on
-account of the muscular rigidity. The force required
-to lift the tissues is so great and the position
-of the arm is so cramped that it is difficult
-to get a clear view of the field. The difficulty has
-impressed all who have worked in this particular
-line. It remained for Dr. H. P. Mosher, of Boston,
-to discover a method of direct laryngoscopy
-which makes it as simple under ether anesthesia
-as in the sitting position. In April, 1908, he described
-in the <i>Boston Medical and Surgical Journal</i>
-the "left lateral position" for examining the
-larynx and the upper end of the esophagus. He
-designed certain instruments which I believe are
-too cumbersome to meet with popular favor. In
-Mosher's position the patient lies on the table
-with the head turned toward the left until the
-cheek almost rests on the table; the chin is flexed
-on the chest. In our work at the Presbyterian
-Hospital we have found a modified Mosher's position
-and Jackson's child speculum the ideal combination
-for the examination in the prone patient.
-In children the procedure is carried out with or
-without anesthesia. Without anesthesia the head,
-hands and feet are held, the chin is flexed on the
-chest in a normal position by placing a pillow
-under the head, the speculum is introduced and
-the larynx inspected. In adults under anesthesia
-the same procedure is used, and will be found
-much simpler than the extended position. In
-adults, after the speculum is in position, if the
-anterior part of the larynx is not seen, gentle
-pressure on the thyroid cartilage will bring the
-anterior commissure into view. Operations can
-be done through the tube satisfactorily. With
-the different methods of direct laryngoscopy it is
-possible to remove any growth from the larynx.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>919 N. Charles Street.</p>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c003'>ITEMS.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'>The Board of Trustees of the Permanent Endowment
-Fund of the University held its annual
-meeting on January 11. Judge Stockbridge was
-re-elected president and Mr. J. Harry Tregoe secretary-treasurer,
-and, with Dr. Samuel C. Chew
-and Judge Sams, constitute the executive committee
-for the year 1909. The funds and securities
-in hand total the gross sum of $18,635.74.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>A special meeting of the Washington Branch
-of the General Alumni Association was held at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXXIV'>XXXIV</span>the office of the president, Dr. Monte Griffith,
-March 11, 1909, to consider the advisability of
-petitioning the Board of Regents to establish a
-Board of Alumni Counsellors, a paid president
-and a Board of Trustees, independent of the
-teaching faculties. Resolutions in favor of these
-measures were adopted.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. Louis W. Knight, class of 1866, of Baltimore,
-has presented to Loyola College a valuable
-collection of papal medals.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>Drs. H. O. and J. N. Reik have removed their
-offices to 506 Cathedral street.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>Drs. W. D. Scott and W. E. Wiegand attended
-the banquet of the Virginia Military Institute
-Alumni Association of Baltimore, held at the
-New Howard House, March 2, 1909. Dr. W. D.
-Scott responded to the toast "The Younger Generation
-and the Splendid Work of the Virginia
-Military Institute Today."</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>Major William F. Lewis, class of 1893, U. S.
-A. Medical Corps, has been relieved from duty at
-Fort Thomas and ordered to sail on June 5, 1909,
-for the Philippine Islands, via San Francisco, for
-duty.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. Hugh A. Maughlin, class of 1864, of 121
-North Broadway, an official in the United States
-Custom Service, who was assistant surgeon in
-the Sixth Maryland Regiment during the Civil
-War, is dangerously ill of pleurisy at his home.
-Dr. Maughlin is a member of Wilson Post, G.
-A. R.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. James A. Nydegger, class of 1892, past assistant
-surgeon, United States Public Health and
-Marine Hospital Service, has been promoted to
-the rank of surgeon.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. Eugene H. Mullan, class of 1903, assistant
-surgeon, United States Public Health and Marine
-Hospital Service, has been commissioned a past
-assistant surgeon, to rank as such from February
-2, 1909.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. Samuel T. Earle, Jr., of Baltimore, Md.,
-records the case of Mrs. F. H. D., who, the latter
-part of August, 1907, while eating ham, swallowed
-a plate with two false teeth. Ten days
-later she had a violent attack of pain in the abdomen,
-followed by a chill and fever. There was
-no recurrence of this for one and a half months.
-Since then they have recurred from time to time,
-but not as severe, nor have they been attended
-with chill and fever. A diagram taken of the
-lower abdominal and pelvic regions showed the
-plate in the sigmoid flexure of the colon, on a
-level with the promontory of the sacrum. Examination
-through the sigmoidoscope brought it into
-view at the point shown by the X-ray. There was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXXV'>XXXV</span>considerable tenesmus, and the passage of a good
-deal of mucous, also a tendency to constipation.
-Under the influence of two hypodermics of morphine,
-gr. 1-4, hyoscine hydrobromate, gr. gr.
-L-100, and cactina, which produced satisfactory
-anesthesia, Dr. Earle was able to grasp the plate
-through the sigmoidoscope with a pair of long
-alligator forceps, and withdraw it immediately
-behind the sigmoidoscope.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>At the Conference on Medical Legislation, held
-in Washington, D. C., January 18-20, 1909, resolutions
-were adopted providing for a committee
-composed of one member each from the medical
-departments of the Army and the Navy, one from
-the Public Health and Marine Hospital Service,
-one member from the District of Columbia and
-one member from the Council on Medical Legislation,
-to present to the medical profession the
-conditions under which the widow of Major
-James Carroll is now placed, and to devise such
-plans as might seem advisable for her relief. The
-following committee was appointed: Major M.
-W. Ireland, U. S. A.; Surgeon W. H. Bell. U. S.
-N.; Dr. John F. Anderson, U. S. Public Health
-and Marine Hospital Service; Dr. John D.
-Thomas, Washington, D. C., and Dr. A. S. Von
-Mansfelde, of Ashland, Nebraska.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Mrs. Carroll has been granted a pension of
-$125 a month on which to support herself, seven
-young children and the aged mother of her husband.
-The house, which Major Carroll had
-partly paid for, is mortgaged for $5,000. Since
-the conference adjourned the medical officers of
-the Army have raised enough to pay the taxes on
-the house, one monthly note of $50 and the overdue
-interest on the first mortgage, amounting to
-$125. Believing that the members of the medical
-profession will wish to contribute toward a fund
-for the purpose of paying the balance due on the
-house, the committee requests contributions of
-any amount. They may be sent to Major M. W.
-Ireland, United States Army, Washington, D. C.
-The editors of <span class='sc'>The Bulletin</span> sincerely hope our
-alumni will honor the memory of our most distinguished
-alumnus by contributing liberally to
-this most worthy cause.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>At the last regular meeting of the University
-of Maryland Medical Association, held in the amphitheatre
-of the University Hospital, Tuesday,
-March 16, 1909, the program was as follows:
-1, "The General Practitioner: His Relation to His
-Patients, to His Fellow Practitioners and to the
-Community in Which He Lives," Dr. Guy Steele,
-Cambridge, Md.; 2, "Medical Ethics," Dr. Samuel
-C. Chew. Dr. A. M. Shipley, the president,
-was in the chair, and called the meeting to order
-promptly at 8.30 P. M. The attendance was
-large and appreciative, and listened to two remarkably
-able addresses. Those who had
-the privilege and pleasure of listening to the
-words of wisdom and advice both of Dr. Chew
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXXVI'>XXXVI</span>and Dr. Steele went away with a clearer conception
-of their duties to their professional brethren
-and the public.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Immediately after the adjournment of the
-Medical Association the Adjunct Faculty, with
-its president, Dr. Joseph W. Holland, in the chair,
-held a very important meeting, the gist of which
-is as follows: Resolved by the Adjunct Faculty
-of the Medical Department of the University of
-Maryland that the Board of Regents be implored
-to effect such changes in the charter as to make
-possible the election of a president with a fixed
-salary, and with the duties usually associated
-with that office in standard universities, and a
-Board of Administrators independent of teaching
-faculties. The Adjunct Faculty also endorsed
-tentative plans looking towards the formation of
-an advisory board of alumni counsellors.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>At the meeting of the Section on Ophthalmology
-and Otology, Thursday, March 11, 1909, at the
-Faculty Hall, the following of our alumni read
-papers: "Rodent Ulcer of the Cornea (Ulcus
-Rodens Mooren), with Exhibition of the Case,"
-Dr. R. L. Randolph; "Purulent Otitis Media of
-Infancy and Childhood," Dr. H. O. Reik.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>At the meeting of the Section on Neurology
-and Psychiatry, Friday, March 12, 1909, the following
-participated:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>"History and Forms of Chorea," Dr. N. M. Owensby;</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>"Etiology of Chorea, Dr. H. D. McCarty;</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>"Treatment of Chorea," Dr. W. S. Carswell.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>The Baltimore <i>Star</i> of March 27th, 1909, has
-this to say concerning Prof. Randolph Winslow:
-"Prof. Randolph Winslow, head of the Department
-of Surgery of the University of Maryland,
-is one of the best-known lecturers and demonstrators
-in the East. He is a close student, and
-has the faculty of impressing the young men of
-the University with the force of and practicability
-of his knowledge. Professor Winslow stands
-high in medical and surgical circles of the country,
-and ranks with the best surgeons." Under
-the caption of the leading men of Maryland <i>The
-Star</i> also included a photograph of Professor
-Winslow. By honoring Dr. Winslow <i>The Star</i>
-also honors the University of Maryland, whose
-authorities feel a natural pride in the eminent position
-held by its professors.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. Fitz Randolph Winslow, class of 1906, a
-former resident physician in the University Hospital,
-and a resident of Baltimore, has located at
-Hinton, Virginia.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>The Phi Sigma Kappa Fraternity had an at-home
-Saturday, March 27, 1909.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>About sixty members of the Theta Nu Epsilon
-Fraternity, University of Maryland, attended
-a banquet at the Belvedere recently. It
-was served in the main hall, and the tables, which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXXVII'>XXXVII</span>formed a semicircle, were beautifully decorated
-with trailing asparagus and cut flowers. During
-the meal a string orchestra rendered popular selections.
-Dr. Arthur M. Shipley, toastmaster,
-introduced Mr. Frederick W. Rankin, who made
-the address of welcome. Mr. Rankin was followed
-by Dr. C. H. Richards, who responded to
-the toast "Past and Present;" Dr. W. D. Scott
-had as his subject "The Fraternity Man;" Dr.
-R. Dorsey Coale, "The Undergraduate;" Dr.
-Randolph Winslow, "The Near Doctor;" Dr.
-John C. Hemmeter, "Our University," and Mr.
-C. B. Mathews, "The Ladies." The reception
-committee in charge of the arrangements was as
-follows: Frederick W. Rankin, chairman; Ross
-S. McElwee; John W. Robertson, John S. Mandigo,
-Arthur L. Fehsenfeld, J. F. Anderson.</p>
-<hr class='c006' />
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c003'>DEATHS.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c004'>Dr. Joseph R. Owens, class of 1859, mayor of
-Hyattsville, Md., and treasurer of the Maryland
-Agricultural College, died at his home, in Hyattsville,
-March 15, 1909, after a lingering illness
-of six months. Death came peacefully, and at
-the bedside were his wife, who was Miss Gertrude
-E. Councilman, of Worthington Valley,
-Baltimore county, Md.; his daughter, Mrs. Geo.
-B. Luckey, and his son, Charles C. Owens, of
-New York. Besides these he is survived by his
-mother, Mrs. Percilla Owens, 90 years of age; a
-son, Mr. L. Owens, of New York, and a daughter,
-Mrs. A. A. Turbeyne, of England.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. Owens was born in Baltimore, February
-20, 1839, and was 70 years old. His parents removed
-to West River when he was seven years
-of age. When he was ten years old he entered
-Newton Academy, Baltimore, and in 1859 was
-graduated from the Medical Department of the
-University of Maryland. Immediately after leaving
-the University he was appointed resident
-physician at the Baltimore City Almshouse, and
-served in this capacity to 1861, when he returned
-to Anne Arundel county and began farming on
-West River. In 1885 he removed to Hyattsville
-and accepted the position of clerk of the Claims
-Division of the Treasury Department, Washington.
-He held this office until 1890, when he was
-named as treasurer of the Maryland Agricultural
-College, which position he filled until death. For
-several years Dr. Owens was collector of taxes in
-Anne Arundel county. When the municipal government
-of Hyattsville was changed from a board
-of commissioners to a mayor and common council,
-Dr. Owens was elected councilman from the
-Third ward, and served with marked ability until
-May, 1906, when he was elected mayor.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>He was elected for three consecutive terms
-without opposition, and was foremost in every
-move tending to the advancement of the town.
-As treasurer of the Maryland Agricultural College
-he became acquainted with many of the leading
-men of the State, by whom he was held in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXXVIII'>XXXVIII</span>highest esteem. He was secretary of the Vansville
-Farmers' Club for many years, a director
-of the First National Bank of Hyattsville. Interment
-was in the cemetery adjoining Old St.
-James' Protestant Episcopal Church, near West
-River, Anne Arundel county. The coffin was
-borne from his late residence, Hill Top Lodge,
-by seven cadets of the Agricultural College--Cadet-Major
-Mayor, Captains Burrough and Jassell,
-Lieutenant Jarrell and Sergeants Freere,
-Saunders and Cole. A squad of 25 cadets, five
-from each class of the College, under command
-of Captain Gorsuch, escorted the body to Pinkey
-Memorial Church, where the Episcopal burial
-service was read by Rev. Henry Thomas, rector
-of St. Matthew's Parish, of which Dr. Owens
-had been registrar and a member of the vestry
-for several years. The body, preceded by the
-college cadets, was taken to the Chesapeake
-Beach Railway Station and shipped to Lyons
-Creek, and thence to St. James' Church. Rev.
-Henry Thomas officiated at the grave. The pall-bearers
-were: Messrs. Wirt Harrison, Harry W.
-Dorsey, E. B. Owens, O. H. Carr, T. Sellman
-Hall and E. A. Fuller. A special meeting of the
-Mayor and Common Council was held in Heptasophs'
-Hall March 22, 1909, to take action upon
-the death of Dr. Joseph R. Owens, late Mayor of
-Hyattsville. Acting Mayor John Fainter Jr., was
-chairman and Town Clerk G. H. Carr was secretary.
-Former Mayor Dr. C. A. Wells eulogized
-the late Mayor, both as a public official and a private
-citizen. Dr. Joseph A. Mudd, W. P. Magruder,
-R. E. White, J. W. Aman and Edward Devlin,
-all members of the Council who served with
-Dr. Owens, and R. W. Wells, M. J. Smith and
-S. J. Kelly, the last named as members of the
-present Council, also made appropriate addresses.
-It was resolved that in the passing away of Dr.
-Joseph R. Owens, Mayor of Hyattsville, we have
-lost a conscientious official, a valued associate and
-a personal friend, and the citizens of Hyattsville
-at large, as well as his official associates, have experienced
-a bereavement, the effects of which
-they will ever feel.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. Asa S. Linthicum, class of 1852, a former
-member of the Board of County Commissioners
-of Anne Arundel county, died at his home, in
-Jessup, Md., Sunday, March 28, 1909, from apoplexy,
-aged 78. About 25 years ago Dr. Linthicum
-retired from the active practice of medicine
-to engage in iron ore mining.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. Linthicum's wife, who died about five
-years ago, was Miss Nettie Crane, of Clifton
-Springs, N. J. Interment was in Loudon Park
-Cemetery, Baltimore.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. John Bailey Mullins, class of 1887, of
-Washington, D. C., a member of the American
-Medical Association and the American Society of
-Laryngology and Otology, formerly of Norfolk,
-Va., died at his home, in Washington, D.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_XXXIX'>XXXIX</span>C., from cerebral hemorrhage, February 11, 1909,
-aged 42.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Resolutions on the death of Dr. John Bailey
-Mullins:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='sc'>Whereas</span>, It has been God's purpose to suddenly
-call hence one of our most useful and beloved
-members; be it</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><i>Resolved</i>, By the Washington Branch of the
-General Alumni Association of the University of
-Maryland, that we are deeply grieved by the premature
-death of our honored associate. By his
-death the public, especially those worthy of charity,
-whom he was ever ready to serve, have lost a
-most useful citizen, the medical profession a
-skilled and painstaking physician and surgeon,
-and the University of Maryland an able and active
-worker. And be it further</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><i>Resolved</i>, That the sympathy of this Association
-be extended to his daughter, whom he loved
-before all else on earth, and to whom he was ever
-a dutiful father. And be it further</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><i>Resolved</i>, That these resolutions be spread
-upon the minutes of our Association and a copy
-of the same be sent to the parent Alumni Association
-in Baltimore.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Committee--I. S. Stone, William L. Robbins,
-Harry Hurtt, Monte Griffith, president; W. M.
-Simpkins, secretary.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. Samuel Groome Fisher, class of 1854, of
-Port Deposit, Md., died at the home of his son,
-in Port Deposit, February 22, 1909, aged 77. For
-more than 50 years Dr. Fisher was a practitioner
-of Chestertown, Md.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. Charles Brewer, class of 1855, of Vineland,
-N. J., died at his home, in Vineland, March 3,
-1909, aged 76. From 1858 to the outbreak of
-the Civil War he was a member of the Medical
-Corps of the Army, and during the war a surgeon
-in the Confederate States service. Under President
-Cleveland he was postmaster at Vineland,
-N. J., and resident physician at the State Prison,
-Trenton, from 1891 to 1896.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. William F. Chenault, class of 1888, of
-Cleveland, N. C., a member of the Medical Society
-of the State of North Carolina, died at his
-home, in Cleveland, N. C., February 24, 1909,
-from cerebral hemorrhage, aged 46.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. James B. R. Purnell, class of 1850, of
-Snow Hill, Maryland, died at his home, in Snow
-Hill, March 7, 1909, from senile debility, aged 80.
-He was vice-president of the Medical and Chirurgical
-Faculty of Maryland in 1900-1901, formerly
-physician to the county almshouse and health officer
-of Worcester county.</p>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<p class='c005'>Dr. Benjamin Franklin Laughlin, class of
-1904, of Kingwood, West Virginia, died at the
-home of his father, in Deer Park, Md., from
-paralysis, March 9, 1909, aged 31.</p>
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_XL'>XL</span><b>IN PNEUMONIA</b> the inspired air should be rich in oxygen and comparatively
-cool, while the surface of the body, especially the thorax,
-should be kept warm, lest, becoming chilled, the action of the phagocytes
-in their battle with the pneumococci be inhibited.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Antiphlogistine</i></div>
- <div class='c000'>(<i>Inflammation's Antidote</i>)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'>applied to the chest wall, front, sides and back, hot and thick, stimulates the
-action of the phagocytes and often turns the scale in favor of recovery.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><b>Croup.</b>--Instead of depending on an emetic for quick action in
-croup, the physician will do well to apply Antiphlogistine hot and thick from
-ear to ear and down over the interclavicular space. The results of such treatment
-are usually prompt and gratifying.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='small'>Antiphlogistine hot and thick is also indicated in Bronchitis and Pleurisy</span></p>
-
-<hr class='c007' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><b>The Denver Chemical Mfg. Co. New York</b></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c007' />
-
-<div class='c005'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/i_020.jpg' width='150' height='160' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi1_1'>
-Certain as it is that a single acting cause can bring
-about any one of the several anomalies of menstruation,
-just so certain is it that a single remedial agent--if
-properly administered--can effect the relief of
-any one of those anomalies.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>¶ The singular efficacy of Ergoapiol (Smith) in the
-various menstrual irregularities is manifestly due to its prompt
-and direct analgesic, antispasmodic and tonic action upon the
-entire female reproductive system.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>¶ Ergoapiol (Smith) is of special, indeed extraordinary, value in
-such menstrual irregularities as <i>amenorrhea</i>, <i>dysmenorrhea</i>,
-<i>menorrhagia</i> and <i>metrorrhagia</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>¶ The creators of the preparation, the Martin H. Smith
-Company, of New York, will send samples and exhaustive
-literature, post paid, to any member of the medical profession.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c003'>Transcriber's Note</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>The original spelling and punctuation has been retained,
-accept for confirmed typos.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been
-preserved.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hospital Bulletin, Vol. V, No. 2,
-April 15, 1909, by Various
-
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