Kopperman, Paul E. “"Venerate the lancet": Benjamin Rush's yellow fever therapy in context.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2004 (78): 539-574.
October 7 Monday
The Evolution of Inhalation Anesthesia
Medicine and Western Civilization. “Ignaz Semmelweis.” p. 240.
Medicine and Western Civilization. “Frances Burney.” p. 383.
Medicine and Western Civilization “James Young Simpson.” p. 398.
Medicine and Western Civilization. “Joseph Lister.” p. 247.
Claiborne, Herbert. “The use of chlororform in labor.” JAMA, 1884, 3(15): 401-406.
Lundy, Chas. J. “Muriate of cocaine in ophthalmic practice.” JAMA, 1884, 3(21): 575-576.
“The medico-legal relation of anti septic surgery.” JAMA, 1889, 13(23): 818-819.
Lackerstenn, M. H. “The scientific aspects of medical hypnotism, or treatment by suggestion.” Reprinted from November 22, 1890 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1990, 264(20): 2581.
“Ether intoxication.” JAMA, 1890, 15(20): 722-723. “Another death from chloroform.” JAMA, 1891, 16(10): 347.
“Hypnotism by telegram.” Reprinted from June 21 1890 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1990, 263(22): 3000.
Lackersteen, M. H. “The scientific704-708. aspects of medical hypnotism, or treatment by suggestion.” JAMA, 1890, 15(20): 704-708.
“Ether intoxication.” JAMA, 1890, 15(20): 722-723.
Lackersteen, M. H. “The scientific704-708. aspects of medical hypnotism, or treatment by suggestion.” JAMA, 1890, 15(21): 745-751.
“Medical progress: Report of an experimental investigation of the action of chloroform and ether.” JAMA, 1890, 15(22): 789-794.
“Chloroform versus ether.” JAMA, 1891, 16(2): 58-59.
“Another death from chloroform.” JAMA, 1891, 16(10): 347.
“Another death from chloroform.” Reprinted from March 7, 1891 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1991, 265(9): 1080.
Boylan, Jno. E. “Local anaethesia with the pharyngeal cocaine syringe.” Reprinted from October 10, 1891 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1991, 266(15): 2076.
“A new method of inducing local anaesthesia.” JAMA, 1892, 18(3): 83-84.
Rushmore, J. D. “Ether anesthesia.” Reprinted from March 18, 1892 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1991, 267(11): 1427.
Hare, H. A.; and Thornton, E. Q. “The action and safety of chloroform.” JAMA, 1893, 21(16): 573-577.
Cholewa. “Infiltration-anesthesia and its relation to general anesthesia.” Reprinted from May 26, 1894 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1994, 271(18): 1450b.
Davis, Charles G. “Hypnotism, with special reference to hypnotic suggestion as an aid to the anesthesia of chloroform and ether.” JAMA, 1895, 25(14): 573-575.
Wheaton, C. A. “Address on surgery.” JAMA, 1895, 24(21): 779-782.
“The administration of chloroform.” JAMA, 1895, 24(23): 899.
Brown, Bedford. “The therapeutic action of chloroform in parturition.” JAMA, 1895, 25(9): 354-358.
Wurdemann, H. V. “The infiltration method of anesthesia in ophthalmic practice.” JAMA, 1895, 25(20): 843-846
DeHart, J. N. “A safe method by which anesthetics may be administered with oxygen.” JAMA, 1896, 26(25): 1211-1214.
“The indifferent anesthetist.” Reprinted from September 10, 1898 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1994, 2801(10): 880.
Daniels, C. M. “The use of cocain in minor operations.” JAMA, 1896, 26(13): 618-620
Caldwell, W. S. “Ether and chloroform.” JAMA, 1896, 27(25): 1289-1293.
Galloway, D. H. “Ether or chloroform.” JAMA, 1897, 28(1): 38-39.
Galloway, D. H. “Chloroform and gaslight intoxication.” Reprinted from November 5, 1898 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1998, 280(17): 1478.
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Trent, J.C. "Surgical anesthesia, 1846-1946." Journal of the History of Medicine 1946 (1): 505-514.
Hamilton, D. "The nineteenth century surgical revolution - antisepsis or better nutrition?" Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1982 (56): 30-40.
Pernick, Martin S. "The calculus of suffering in 19th-century surgery." In Sickness and Health in America, pp. 98-112, 1985 edition.
Brieger, Gert H. "A portrait of surgery. Surgery in America, 1875-1889." Surgical Clinics of North America 1987 (67): 1181-1216.”
Gariepy, Thomas P. "The introduction and acceptance of Listerian antisepsis in the United States." Journal of the History of Medicine 1994 (49): 167-206.
Smith, Dale C. “The evolution of modern surgery: A brief overview.” in A History of Neurosurgery. 1997. pp. 11-26.
Jacob, Margaret C.; Sauter, Michael J. “Why did Humphry Davy and associates not pursue the pain-alleviating effects of nitrous oxide?” Journal of the History of Medicine 2002 (57): 161-176.
Haridas, Rajesh P. “Photographs of early Ether anesthesia in Boston: The daguerreotypes of Albert Southworth and Josiah Hawes.´ .” Anesthesiology, 2010, 113(1): 13-26.
Kissin, Igor. “The development of new analgesics over the past 50 years: A lack of real breakthrough drugs.” Anesthesia & Analgesia, 2010, 115(6): 780-789.
Pandit, J. J. “The analysis of variance in anaesthetic research: statistics, biography and history.” Anesthesia, 2011, 2010, 65: 1212-1220.
Malefant, Jason; et. al. “Henry Jacob Bigelow (1818–1890): His contributions to anatomy and surgery,” Clinical Anatomy, 2011, 24: 539-543.
Mulroy, Michael F. “Daniel C. Moore, MD, and the Renaissance of regional anesthesia in North America.” Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, 2011, 36(6): 625-629.
Calmes, Selma H. “Laurette McMechan (1878–1970): ‘Mother of anesthetists’.” Anesthesia & Analgesia, 2012, 110(3): 1401-1409.
October 8 Tuesday noon Scaife Hall-TBA
Laura McLafferty, M.D., Chief Resident for Education
PGY-4 Resident in General Adult Psychiatry-Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic
“Hurting for Home: Nostalgia in American Military Psychiatry from the Civil War to WWII.”
October 9 Wednesday
Medicine and Health Care in the Old South and the Civil War
“The health of veterans, or twenty-five years after the war.” JAMA, 1892, 18(5): 141. Edwell, Marshall D. “Some rules of the common law respecting the disposition of human dead bodies. A sketch of English legislation upon the subject of anatomy, and a draft of an act to promote the science of anatomy, medicine, and surgery in the state of Illinois.” JAMA, 1884, 2(5): 116-121.
Powell, Theophilus O. “The increase of insanity and tuberculosis in the Southern Negro since 1860, and its alliance, and some of the supposed causes.” JAMA, 1896, 27(23): 1185-1188.
Hoff, J. W. “Blood-letting as a therapeutic remedy, based on a report of twenty-six cases.” Reprinted from an 1897 issue of JAMA.. JAMA 278(7): 530ai.
“Surgeons as non-belligerents in war.” Reprinted from the January 14, 2011 issue of JAMA.. JAMA 305(2): 205.
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Duffy, John. "Medical practice in the ante-bellum South." Journal of Southern History 1959 (225): 53-72.
Duffy, John. "Medicine in the Civil War." In From Humors to Medical Science, pp. 151-166.
reeden, James O. "A medical history of the later stages of the Atlanta campaign." Journal of Southern History 1969 (35): 31-59.
Warner, John H. "The idea of Southern medical distinctiveness: Medical knowledge and practice in the Old South." In Sickness and Health in America, pp. 53-70, 1985 edition.
Savitt, Todd L. "Black health on the plantation: Masters, slaves, and physicians." In Sickness and Health in America, pp. 313-330, 1985 edition.
Patterson, K. David. "Disease environments of the antebellum South." In Science and Medicine in the Old South. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1989, pp. 152-165.
towe, Stephen M. "Obstetrics and the work of doctoring in the mid-nineteenth century American South." Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1990 (64): 540-566.
Freemont, Frank R. “The first career of William Alexander Hammond.” Journal of the History of the Neurosciences 1996 (5): 282-287.
lannery, Michael A. “Another house divided: Union medical service and sectarians during the Civil War.” Journal of the History of Medicine 1999 (54): 478-510.
Hasegawa, Guy R. “Pharmacy in the American Civil War.” Pharmacy in History 2000(42): 67-86.
lannery, Michael. “Civil War pharmacy and medicine: Comparisons and contexts.” Pharmacy in History 2004(6):71-80.
Flannery, Michael. “Hapless or helpmate? The effectiveness of the Union’s blockade of the Confederacy from a medical perspective.” North & South: The Official Magazine of the Civil War Society, 2005, 8(3): 72-80.
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