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Entry Nos. 10300–10399

99 Garrison-Morton entries in this range.

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1977 CE

#10300

Medicine in Cleveland and Cuyahoga County: 1810-1976. Edited by Kent L. Brown.

41 chapters that address all aspects of medical and surgical practice (arranged by specialty) in addition to studies of specific institutions and special groups (e.g. women physicians and black physicians).

1930 CE

#10301

Medical history of Michigan. Compiled and edited by a committee, C. B. Burr, Chairman, and published under the auspices of the Michigan State Medical Society. 2 vols.

Digital facsimile from the U.S. Library of Congress at this link.

1984 CE

#10302

Medicine in Maryland, 1634-1900,

1991 CE

#10303

The computer-based patient record: An essential technology for health care. Committee on Improving the Patient Record, Division of Health Care Services, Institute of Medicine. Edited by Richard S. Dick and Elaine B. Steen

1927 CE

#10304

History of medicine in Iowa.

2017 CE

#10305

The religion of chiropractic: Populist healing from America's heartland.

1985 CE

#10306

Scalpels and sabers: Nineteenth century medicine in Texas.

1915 CE

#10307

The medical history of Milwaukee, 1834-1914.

1933 CE

#10308

Red medicine: Socialized health in Soviet Russia.

Digital facsimile from Google Books at this link.

1964 CE

#10309

Lakeside pioneers: Socio-medical study of Nysaland, 1875-1920.

1953 CE

#10310

Tropical victory: An account of the influence of medicine on the history of Southern Rhodesia, 1890-1923.

1961 CE

#10311

Northern Rhodesia in the days of the charter: A medical and social study, 1878-1924.

1976 CE

#10312

A service to the sick: A history of the health services for Africans in Southern Rhodesia (1890-1953).

1993 CE

#10313

Pub & pilules: Histoires et communication du médicament.

1900 CE

#10314

One hundred years of medicine and surgery in Missouri: Historical and biographical review of the careers of the physicians and surgeons of the state of Missouri, and sketches of some of its notable medical institutions. Edited by Max A. Goldstein.

Digital facsimile from the Internet Archive at this link.

1999 CE

#10315

Against the odds: Blacks in the profession of medicine in the United States.

1930 CE

#10316

The centennial history of the Tennessee State Medical Association, 1830-1930.

1911 CE

#10318

A medical history of the state of Indiana.

Digital facsimile from the Hathi Trust at this link.

1985 CE

#10319

In the name of eugenics: Genetics and the uses of human heredity.

1972 CE

#10320

Medicine in North Carolina: Essays in the history of medical science and medical service, 1524 1960. Edited by Dorothy Long. 2 vols.

1961 CE

#10321

A history of the therapy of tuberculosis and the case of Frederic Chopin.

1957 CE

#10322

A Medical chronicle of New York State: Being a compendium of historic developments and events during the past 150 years, published on the occasion of the sesquicentennial of the Medical Society of the State of New York.

1977 CE

#10323

Medicine in Kentucky.

1940 CE

#10324

Medicine and its development in Kentucky. Medical Historical Research Project of the Work Projects Administration for the Commonwealth of Kentucky.

1995 CE

#10325

Tincture of time: The story of 150 years of medicine in Atlanta, 1845-1994.

1956 CE

#10326

The history of medical education in Indiana

1984 CE

#10327

History of the black physician in Indianapolis 1870 to 1980.

2011 CE

#10328

Biographical dictionary of American physicians of African ancestry, 1800-1920.

1981 CE

#10329

A century of surgery: The history of the American Surgical Association, 1880-1980. 2 vols.

1984 CE

#10330

Stapling in surgery.

Ravitch and Steichen refined primitive surgical stapling systems that were developed in Russia, and made them viable in a wide range of procedures.

1989 CE

#10331

Saddlebags to scanners: The first 100 years of medicine In Washington State. Edited by Nancy M. Rockefellar and James W. Haviland.

1998 CE

#10332

An alternative Path: The making and remaking of Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital.

"When Hahnemann Medical College was founded in Philadelphia in 1848, it was the only institution in the world to offer an M. D. degree in homeopathy, a therapeutic and intellectual alternative to orthodox medicine. Th…

1930 CE

#10333

A brief history of medicine in Massachusetts.

1881 CE

#10334

History of medicine in Massachusetts. A centennial address delivered before the Massachusetts Medical Society at Cambridge, June 7, 1881.

Digital facsimile from the Hathi Trust at this link.

2001 CE

#10335

Dying in the City of the Blues: Sickle cell anemia and the politics of race and health.

"Set in Memphis, home of one of the nation's first sickle cell clinics, Dying in the City of the Blues reveals how the recognition, treatment, social understanding, and symbolism of the disease evolved in the twentiet…

1847 CE–1847 CE

#10336

Southern ichthyology; or a description of the fishes inhabiting the waters of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. Pt. 2, 1847, Pt. 3, 1848.

Holbrook never published part one of this work.

1860 CE

#10337

Ichthyology of South Carolina. Vol. 1 (All Published).

Digital facsimile from BnF Gallica at this link.

1999 CE

#10338

Natural history investigations in South Carolina from colonial times to the present.

2000 CE

#10339

Science, race, and religion in the American South. John Bachman and the Charleston circle of naturalists, 1815-1895.

1989 CE

#10340

Cancer mapping, edited by Peter Boyle, Calum S. Muir, and Ekkehard Grundmann.

The first chapter, by G. M. Howe is "Historical evolution of disease mapping in general and specifically of cancer mapping." The book as a whole discusses the wide range of cancer maps and atlases in U.S., Europe and …

2015 CE

#10341

Beyond germs: Native depopulation in North America. Edited by Catherine M. Cameron, Paul Kelton, and Alan C. Swedlund.

This book "challenges the “virgin soil” hypothesis that was used for decades to explain the decimation of the indigenous people of North America. This hypothesis argues that the massive depopulation of the…

2010 CE

#10342

Shadows in the valley: A cultural history of illness, death, and loss in New England, 1840-1916.

"...The study is organized for the most part around disease categories and the life cycle, so that the cultural framework of people's habits and values often seems secondary. Most of what we learn about illness and de…

1666 CE

#10343

Ventilabrum medico-theologicum: Quo omnes casus, tum medicos, cum aegros, aliosque concernentes euentilantur, et quod SS.PP. conformius, scholasticis probabilius, & in conscientia tutius est, secernitur ...

An early work on Catholic medical morality. Digital facsimile from Google Books at this link.

1741 CE–1751 CE

#10344

Nuevo aspecto de theologia medico-moral y ambos derechos, ó paradoxas phisico-theologico-legales. 3 vols.

Rodríguez, a self-taught Cistercian monk, dealt with issues in medical ethics in this manual for confessors.

2012 CE

#10345

Death, dying, and organ transplantation: Reconstructing medical ethics at the end of life.

2007 CE

#10346

Encyclopédie sur la mort: La mort et la mort volontaire à travers les pays et les âges.

http://agora.qc.ca/thematiques/mort/

1777 CE

#10347

Two essays. [Essay I. Of suicide]

Of suicide, "probably the most widely read and most influential philosophical treatment of suicide written in modern times," was written in 1755 and originally intended to be published as one of five essays, including…

1789 CE

#10348

Observations on the duties of a physician, and the methods of improving medicine. Accommodated to the present state of society and manners in the United States. Delivered in the University of Pennsylvania, February 7, 1789, at the conclusion of a course of lectures upon chemistry and the practice of physic.

Full text available from quod.lib.umich.edu at this link.

1845 CE

#10349

Déontologie médicale ou des devoirs et des droits des médecins dans l'état actuel de la civilisation.

Digital facsimile from Google Books at this link.

1886 CE

#10350

The relation of hospitals to medical education.

Withington, pp. 18-22, proposed Bills of Rights for subjects of experiments "to secure patients again any injustice from the votaries of science." Digital facsimile from the Internet Archive at this link.