Treatment of Cholera in the Royal Hospital, Haslar / during the months of July and August, 1849, with remarks on the name and origin of the disease.
Explore more books like this:
About This Book
An eyewitness account of cholera cases treated at the Royal Hospital, Haslar during July and August 1849, outlining clinical practice and outcomes. It describes immediate hot baths, abdominal and limb friction, opiates, frequent calomel dosing, oil of turpentine given orally and by enema, enemata, sinapisms, occasional bloodletting, and other supportive measures. The author argues turpentine promotes mercurial action and intestinal restraint, distinguishes epidemic disease from bilious variants, reports 37 admissions with 12 deaths, and analyzes patterns of collapse, re‑action, prognosis, and the disease's name and origin.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
4 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
Poison-ivy, poison-oak and poison sumac
by D. M. Crooks
Researches Chemical and Philosophical; Chiefly concerning nitrous oxide / or dephlogisticated nitrous air and its respiration
by Sir Humphry Davy
Good Health and How We Won It, With an Account of the New Hygiene
by Upton Sinclair
The Farmer's Veterinarian: A Practical Treatise on the Diseases of Farm Stock
by Charles William Burkett
The Girl in Industry
by Dorothy Josephine Collier
Blood Transfusion
by Geoffrey Keynes



