History of medicine and health care 2013 Honors College; History 1090; Sociology 1488; shrs 2906 coordinators: Jonathon Erlen, Ph. D. 648-8927-office


Humphreys, Margaret. “A stranger to our camps: Typhus in American history.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 2006 (80): 269-290



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Humphreys, Margaret. “A stranger to our camps: Typhus in American history.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 2006 (80): 269-290.

Wall, L. Lewis. “Did J. Marion Sims deliberately addict his first fistula patients to opium?” Journal of the History of Medicine 2007 (62): 336-356. available in PDF format.


Kenny, Stephen C. “I can do the child no good’: Dr Sims and the Enslaved Infants of Montgomery, Alabama.” Social History of Medicine 2007 (20): 223-241.
Boster, Dea H. “An “Epeleptick” Bondswoman: Fits, slavery, and power in the Antebellum South.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2009 (83): 271-301.

Kenny, Stephen C. ““A dictate of both interest and mercy”?: Slave hospitals in the Antebellum South.” Journal of the History of Medicine 2010 (65): 2-47.


Wilson, Sven E. “Prejudice & policy: Racial discrimination in the Union army disability pension system, 1865-1906.” American Journal of Public Health, 2010, 100(S1): S56-S65.

“Virginia regulates sex among servants, slaves, and masters, 1642-1769.” In Major Problems in the History of American Sexuality. Pp. 72-76.


“Harriet Jacobs relates incidents in the life of a slave girl, 1861.” In Major Problems in the History of American Sexuality. Pp. 147-152.
Savitt, Todd. “The Georgia Freedmen’s Bureau and the organization of health care, 1865-66.” In Race and Medicine in Nineteenth-and Early-Twentieth-Century America. Pp.101-117.
Schluessler, Jennifer. “ Liberation as death sentence.” The New York Times, June 10, 2012.
Telford, Jennifer C.; and Long, Thomas L. “Gendered spaces, gendered pages: Union women in

Civil War nurse narratives.” Medical Humanities, 2012. 38(2): 97-105.


Kenny, Stephen C. “The development of medical museums in the antebellum American South: Slave bodies in networks of anatomical exchange.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 2013, 87(1): 32-62.
Lineberry, Cate. “Breaking medicine’s color barrier.” The New York Times, 2013.


October 11 Friday

Sectarian Medical Movements in 19th and 20th Century America
http://www.quackwatch.org/01QuackeryRelatedTopics/holmes.html
Reyburn, Robert. “Curiosities of homeopathic pharmacy.” JAMA, 1890, 15(14): 500-501.
“Curiosities of homeopathic pharmacy.” Reprinted from October 4, 1890 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1990, 264(13): 1724.
Roberts, John B. “Points of similarity between us and homeopathic physicians.” JAMA, 1893, 20(21): 580-584.

Ziegler, J. L. “Points of similarity between us and homeopathic physicians.” JAMA, 1893, 21(17): 615-618.

Solis-Cohen, Solomon. “The dissimilarity between physicians and homeopaths. A reply to the presidential address of Dr. John B. Roberts.” JAMA, 1893, 21(17): 618-619.
“ “An ethical symposium.” JAMA, 1884, 2(4): 98-99.
Vindex. “New York letter.” JAMA, 1884, 2(8): 221.
“Quackery in American.” Reprinted from April 14, 1900 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2000, 283(14): 1798.
Carroll, Alfred L. “The New York state examination act.” JAMA, 1980, 15(8): 300-301.
“Iowa Medical Board upheld.—State Supreme Court passes on the mooted question of Its authority.” JAMA, 1893, 20(19): 542.

“A rival to Perkinism.” JAMA, 1895, 24(26): 1020.

“The rival monuments at Washington to Hahnemann and Rush.” JAMA, 1895, 25(5): 205.

“Modern medicine and homeopathy.” JAMA, 1895, 25(10): 423.

Roberts, John B. “The present attitude of physician and modern medicine toward homeopathy.” JAMA, 1896, 16(7): 299-307.

“’The thought machine.’” JAMA, 1896, 26(17): 834-835.

Mylrea, W. H. “The Wisconsin diploma mill.” JAMA, 1896, 26(25): 1238-1239.

“Medical legislation in 1897.” JAMA, 1897, 28(18): 849.

“An osteopathic conspiracy.” JAMA, 1897, 28(19): 903.

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Keeney, Elizabeth B., Lederer, Susan E., and Minihan, Edmond P. "Sectarians and scientists: Alternatives to orthodox medicine." In Wisconsin Medicine: Historical Perspectives. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1981. Pp. 47-74.
Rothstein, William G. "The botanical movements and orthodox medicine." In Norman Gevitz, ed. Other Healers. 1988. Pp. 29-51.
Gevitz, Norman. "Osteopathic medicine: From deviance to difference." In Norman Gevitz, ed. Other Healers. 1988. Pp. 124-156.
Kaufman, Martin. "Homeopathy in America: The rise and fall and persistence of a medical heresy." In Norman Gevitz, ed. Other Healers. 1988. pp. 99-123.

Rgers, Naomi. "Women and sectarian medicine." In Women, Health, and Medicine in America, 1991. pp. 281-310.


Wittern, Renate. “The origins of homeopathy in Germany.” Clio Medica, 1991 (22): 51-63.
Martin, Steven C. "The only truly scientific method of healing: Chiropractic and American science, 1895- 1990."ISIS 1994 (85): 207-227.
Jacobs, Jennifer; et. al. “Treatment of acute childhood diarrhea with homeopathic medicine: A randomized clinical trial in Nicaragua.” Pediatrics, 1994, 93: 719-726.
Jacobs, J.; Jimenez, LM, et. al. “Treatment of acute childhood diarrhea with homeopathic medicine: a randomized clinical trial in Nicaragua.” Pediatrics 1994 (93): 719-725.
Eisenberg, David M. “Advising patients who seek alternative medical therapies.” Annals of Internal Medicine, 1997 (127): 61-69.
Hrschmann, Anne T. “Adding women to the ranks, 1860-1890: A new view with a Homeopathic lens.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1999 (73): 429-446.
Weisz, George. “ Spas, mineral waters, and hydrological science in twentieth-century France.” ISIS 2001 (92): 451-483.
lannery, Michael. “The early botanical medical movement as a reflection of life, liberty, and literacy in Jacksonian America.” Journal of the Medical Library Association, 2002 (90): 442-454.
Eisenberg, David M.; et. al.; “A critical overview of homeopathy.” Annals of Internal Medicine, 2003, 138: 393-399.
Jonas, Wayne B.; et. al. “A critical overview of homeopathy.” Annals of Internal Medicine, 2003, 138: 393-399.
Marland, Hilary; Adams, Jane. “Hydropathy at home: The Water Cure and domestic healing in mid-nineteenth-century Britain.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2009 (83): 499-529.

Appel, Toby A. “The Thomsonian movement, the regular profession, and the state in antebellum Connecticut: A case study of the repeal of early medical licensing laws.” Journal of the History of Medicine 2010 (65): 153-186.


Whorton, James C. “From cultism to CAM: Alternative medicine in the twentieth century.” In Johnston, Robert D., editor. The Politics of Healing: Histories of Alternative Medicine in Twentieth-Century North America. Pp.287-305.
“Campbell University School of Osteopathic Medicine approved to recruit students.” April 25, 2012.
October 14 Monday Fall Break-no class
October 15 Tuesday

Folk Medicine, Domestic Medicine, Health Fads, and Faith Healing in American History

Bridge, Norman. “The therapeutic use of mineral waters.” JAMA, 1884, 3(16): 431-434.

Seiler, Carl. “The therapeutic action of the natural mineral springs of Cresson upon the mucous membrane the nose and throat.” JAMA, 1884, 3(24): 645-646.


Van Bibber, W. C. “The therapeutic action of some of the mineral waters of the United States upon malarial diseases; with rules for their use.” JAMA, 1888, 11(22): 773-776.

Lackersteen, M. H. “The scientific aspects of medical hypnotism, or treatment by suggestion.” JAMA, 1890, 15(21): 747-751.

“The Turkish bath as a remedy.” JAMA, 1891, 16(16): 655-656.

Small, J. W. “The therapeutic action of tonica water. With the history of twenty-six cases where it has been used.” JAMA, 1891, 16(22): 772-775.

“Vegetarianism.” JAMA, 1891, 17(18): 692.


Hulbert, George F. “A contribution for definite and known quantity and quality in mineral waters.” JAMA, 1891, 17(23): 869-876.

Didama, H. D. “Mineral waters crude and refined.” JAMA, 1893, 20(16): 438-439.

“The Arrrowhead Hot Springs of Southern California.” JAMA, 1893, 20(21): 594-595.


“On bicycling for women.” JAMA, 1893, 20(23): 648.
“The Schott method of treating chronic diseases of the heart by baths and gymnastics.” Reprinted from November 11, 1893 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1993, 270(18): 2241.
“Keeleysim dissolving.” Reprinted from November 11, 1893 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1993, 270(20): 2496.
Broome, Wiley. “The dying fads of prostatic therapy.” Reprinted from February 27, 1897 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1897, 277(7): 513z.
Cure for obesity.” Reprinted from November 26, 1898 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1998, 280(18): 1788.
Ginseng in Korea.” Reprinted from December 17, 1898 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1998, 280(20): 1552-a.
“The so-called ‘Christian Science’.” JAMA, 1889, 12(3): 91.

Kellogg, James H. “The influence of alcohol upon urinary toxicity, and its relation to the medical use of alcohol.” JAMA, 1895, 25(12): 486-488.

“Christian ‘Science’.” JAMA, 1895, 25(14): 591.


Moffett, E. D. “Hypnotic insanity.” JAMA, 1895, 25(19): 814-816.
Christison, J. Sanderson. “The nature of a delusion.” JAMA, 1895, 25(20): 864-865.
“The passing of hypnotism.” JAMA, 1895, 25,(20): 867-868.
Howard, William Lee. “Hypnotism. Its uses, abuses and medico-legal relations.” JAMA, 1895, 25(22): 923-927.
Mason, R. Osgood. “Duplex personality-its relationship to hypnotism and to lucidity.” JAMA, 1895, 25(22): 928-933.
Crothers, T. D. “Passing of hypnotism of inebriety.” JAMA, 1895, 25(22): 933-935.
Brown, George V. I. “Attention, an adjuvant in therapeusis.”” JAMA, 1896, 27(3): 128-131.

Kellogg, James Harvey. “Twenty-one years’ experience in the non-alcoholic treatment of disease.” JAMA, 1896, 27(10): 519-521.

Thomas, John D. “Cold baths; their use and abuse.” JAMA, 1896, 27(26): 1330-1335.

Hunt, Randell. “A resume of medical hypnotism.” JAMA, 1897, 28(4): 145-148.


Hay, Eugene C. “The advantages in the treatment of syphilis at the Hot Springs of Arkansas.” JAMA, 1897, 28(6): 251-253.

“Philadelphia County Medical Society.” Reprinted from March 4, 1899 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1999, 281(9): 790.


Haven, A. C. “Hydrotherapy.” Reprinted from August 26, 1899 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1999, 282(8): 718.

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Whorton, James C. "Patient, heal thyself: Popular health reform movements as unorthodox medicine." In Norman Gevitz, ed. Other Healers. pp. 52-81.


Numbers, Ronald L. "Do-it-yourself the sectarian way." in Sickness and Health in America. Pp. 87-96, 1978 edition.
Whorton, James C. Crusaders for Fitness: The History of American Health Reformers. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1982, pp. 331-349.
Cayleff, Susan E. "Gender, ideology, and the water-cure movement." In Norman Gevitz, ed. Other Healers. 1988. Pp. 82-98.
Schoepflin, Rennie B. "Christian Science healing in America." In Norman Gevitz, ed. Other Healers. 1988. Pp. 192-214.
Butler, Jonathan M.; and Schoepflin, Rennie B. "Charismatic women and health: Mary Baker Eddy, Ellen G. White, and Aimee Semple McPherson." In Women, Health, and Medicine in America, 1991. pp. 337-365.
Gevitz, Norman. "`But all the authors are foreigners': American literary nationalism and domestic medical guides." in Roy Porter, ed. The Popularization of Medicine 1650-1850. London: Routledge, 1992. pp. 232- 251.
Gevitz, Norman. "Unorthodox medical theories." in Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine. 1993. v. 1, pp. 603-633.
Greenblatt, Samuel H. “Phrenology in the science and culture of the 19th century.” Neurosurgery 1995 (37): 790-805.
Skolnick, Andrew A. “Old Chinese herbal medicine used for fever yields possible new Alzheimer Disease therapy.” JAMA, 1997, 277(10): 776.
The History of Alternative Medicine in America. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002. pp. 191-217.
Whorton, James. “Therapeutic universalism: Naturopathy.” In Whorton, James. Nature Cures: The history of alternative medicine in America. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002. pp. 191-217.
Toon, Elizabeth; and Golden, Janet. “’Live clean, think clean, and don’t go to burlesque shows’: Charles Atlas as health advisor.” Journal of the History of Medicine 2002 (57): 39-60.
“Sylvester Graham lectures young men on self-restraint.” In Major Problems in the History of American Sexuality. 2002. Pp. 115-117.
Bradley, James; and Dupree, Marqueite. “A shadow of orthodoxy? An epistemology of British hydropathy, 1840-1858.” Medical History 2003 (47): 173-194.
Rosenberg, Charles. “Health in the home: A tradition of print and practice.” In Rosenberg, Charles, ed. Right Living: An Anglo-American Tradition of Self-Help Medicine and Hygiene. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003. pp. 1-20.
Allen, Nathan. “Physical Culture in Amherst College.” American Journal of Public Health 2003 (93): 720-722.

Madden, Deborah. “Contemporary reaction to John Wesley's Primitive Physic: Or, the case of Dr William Hawes examined.” Social History of Medicine 2004 (17): 365-378.


Tomes, Nancy. “The Great American Medicine Show revisited.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2005 (79): 627-663.
Sharma, Avi. “Medicine from the margins? Naturheilkunde from medical heterodoxy to the University of Berlin, 1889-1920.” Social History of Medicine, 2011, 24(2): 334-351.
October 16 Wednesday

Health Care Quackery in American History
Schenck, W. L. “Occult causes of disease.” JAMA, 1884, 3(10): 253-257.

Smith, Q. C. “" Limited practice" and the code of ethics.” JAMA, 1890, 15(19): 699-700.

Chenery, E. “Hypnotism.” JAMA, 1890, 15(26): 926.



“Habitual endorsers of nostrums.” JAMA, 1891, 17(25): 979.




Markham, H. C. “An act pending in Congress of interest to the medical profession.” JAMA, 1891. 16(10): 358.

“Adulteration of foods and drugs.” JAMA, 1892, 18(7): 205-207.



“Frauds in eucalyptus oil.” JAMA, 1892, 18(15): 467-468.

“Editorial note.” JAMA, 1892, 18(17): 535-537.



“Analyses of food preparation.” JAMA, 1892, 18(18): 562.

“Pure foods and pure drugs.” JAMA, 1892, 18(18): 566.


“Drug manufacturers as medical teachers.” Reprinted from April 30, 1892 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1992, 267(16): 2172.
“Gold cure specific.” JAMA, 1892, 19(6): 171-172.

“An alliance of quacks.” JAMA, 1892, 19( 17): 505.




“The inspection of merchantable waters.” JAMA, 1893, 21(16): 581-582.

“Organization a professional necessity.” JAMA, 1893, 21(16): 582.


“Keeleysim dissolving.” Reprinted from November 11, 1893 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1893, 270(20): 2496.


“The Keeley Cure Institutes.” JAMA, 1893, 20(6): 164.

“The advertiser and the medical journal.” JAMA, 1893, 21(21): 778.


“Another ‘cancer cure’ loosing ground.” Reprinted from February 10, 1894 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1994, 271(6): 430b.
“A deceitful Dutch doctor.” Reprinted from February 10, 1894 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1994, 271(6): 430b.
“Can the advertisements in reputable medical journals promote quackery?” Reprinted from June 23, 1894 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1994, 271(22): 1720b.

“The plea of hypnotism in criminal cases.” JAMA, 1895, 24(1): 27.

“The quacks are not suppressed.” JAMA, 1895, 24(13): 495.


Warren, Charles E. “Ready-made medicine.” JAMA, 1895, 24(21): 795-797.
“A “so-called” American quack in Dublin.” JAMA, 1895, 24(25): 983-984. Markham, H. C. “Object of state regulation of practice.” JAMA, 1889, 12(18): 647.
“Omphalopsychims, or faith healing, modern and ancient.” JAMA, 1895, 25(9): 378-379.
“Hypnotism as a moral force.” JAMA, 1895, 25(13): 549.
Conn, Granville P. “State medicine versus fads.” JAMA, 1895, 25(20): 861-864.

“Sale of medicines in original packages.” JAMA, 1895, 25(24): 1054-1055.

Kuh, Edwin J. “A nameless secret remedy.” JAMA, 1896, 26(25): 1237.

“The Pasteur Institute under fire.” Reprinted from January 2, 1897 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1997, 277(2): 107.


“The press and quack medical advertisements.” JAMA, 1897, 28(2): 88.
“ “Business” methods of quacks.” JAMA, 1897, 28(6): 276-277.
Jackson, Edward. “The insidious advertisement.” JAMA, 1897, 28(13): 614.
Stewart, J. Clark. “A radical view of the advertising business.” JAMA, 1897, 28(14): 661-662.
Crothers, T. D. “Concealed alcohol in drugs.” Reprinted from November 13, 1897 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1997, 278(19): 1553.
“Rapid cure for appendicitis.” Reprinted from June 17, 1899 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1999, 281(23): 2256.
“Pure food.” Reprinted from October 28, 1899 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1999, 282(16): 1502-b.
“Druggists’ responsibilities.” Reprinted from December 16, 1899 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1999, 282(23): 2196.

“Habitual endorsers of nostrums.” JAMA, 1891, 17(25): 979.




“License of hospitals.” JAMA, 1895, 24(6): 214.

“An expiring craze.” JAMA, 1895, 25(4): 165.



“Secret cures of inebriety in Bellevue Hospital, New York.” JAMA, 1896, 27(4): 218-219.

Justitia. The Oppenheimer drink-cure in Bellevue Hospital and Gen. O'Beirne's letter.” JAMA, 1896, 27(6): 334-335.


“Should government encourage medicine, or quackery?” JAMA, 1896, 27(6): 329-331.
Winslow, Charles E. “Tuberculosis infection from food.” JAMA, 1896, 27(10): 527-528.
Madden, John. “The mendacity and filth of quack advertising.” JAMA, 1897, 28(9): 402-406.
An American Manufacturer. “Foreign products advertised.” JAMA, 1897, 18(11): 517.
“Osteopathy.” JAMA, 1897, 18(15): 709-710.

“Quackery in American.” Reprinted from April 14, 1900 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2000, 283(14): 1798.


Foshay, Maxwell. “Medical ethics and medical journals.” Reprinted from April 28, 1900 JAMA. JAMA, 283(16): 2080.
“Tablet-triturates and ready-made prescriptions.” Reprinted from April 14, 1900 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2000, 283(14): 1798-a.
“The relations of scientists to newspapers.” Reprinted from September 22, 1900 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2000, 28(13): 1626.
“The relationship of scientists to newspapers.” Reprinted from May 26, 1900 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2000, 283(20): 2634.
Morse, N. C. “Modern empirical inventions.” Reprinted from December 1, 1900 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2000, 284(21): 2690.

“Suggestions and Nostrums.” Reprinted from September 24, 1910. JAMA, 2010, 310(12): 1391.

Germophobia.” Reprinted from 1910. JAMA, 2010, 303(2): 179.

“Will the Wisconsin Pure Food Law be emasculated?” Reprinted from November 26, 1910. JAMA, 2010, 304(20): 1673.



“Where glucose is not corn syrup.” Reprinted from July 2, 1910. JAMA, 2010, 304(1): 103.

“Preservatives and the press.” Reprinted from 1910. JAMA, 2010, 301(3): 81.



“Quackery and nostrums in Great Britain.” Reprinted from December 3, 1910. JAMA, 2010, 304(22): 1740.




“The Department of Agriculture and its work.” Reprinted from December 24 1910. JAMA, 2010, 304(23): 2649.




Endorsed by physicians.” Reprinted from February 3, 1900 issue of JAMA.. JAMA, 2000, 283(5): 581.




“’Getting’ Dr. Wiley.” Reprinted from July 22, 1911 issue of JAMA.. JAMA, 2011, 306(4): 443.

National Library of Medicine. Food and Drugs Act Notices of Judgments [1940-1963].



http://archive.nlm.nih.gov/fdanj/.
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****http://www.quackwatch.org/
Duffy, John. "Quackery in early Pittsburgh." Bulletin of the Allegheny County Medical Society 1962 (51): 607-610.
Matthews, L.G. "Licensed mountebanks in Britain." Journal of the History of Medicine 1964 (19): 30-45.
Young, James H. "Device quackery in America." In Sickness and Health in America. Pp. 97-102, 1978 edition.
Young, James Harvey. “’This greasy counterfeit’: Butter versus oleomargarine in the United States Congress, 1886.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 1979 (53): 392-414.
Young, James H. "Public policy and drug innovation." Pharmacy in History 1982 (24):3-31.
Haller, John S. "A short history of the quack's materia medica." New York State Medical Journal. 1989 (89): 520-525.
Young, James H. "Patent medicines and the self-help syndrome." In Sickness and Health in America, pp. 71-80, 1985 edition.
Young, James H. "AIDS and deceptive therapies." In AIDS and the Historian, 1991. pp. 101-108.
Young, James H. "Why quackery persists." in Barrett ,Stephen; and Jarvis, William T., eds. The Health Robbers: Close Look at Quackery in America. Buffalo: Prometheus Books, 1993. pp. 457-464.
Loeb, Lori. “Beating the flu: Orthodox and commercial responses in influenza in Britain, 1889-1919.” Social History of Medicine 2005 (18): 203-224.
Kirk, Robert G. W.; and Pemberton, Neil. “Re-imagining bleeders: The medical leech in nineteenth century bloodletting encounter.” Medical History, 2011, 55(3): 355-360.
Harris, Gardiner. “White House and the F.D.A. often at odds.” The New York Times, April 2, 2012.
“Significant dates in U.S. food and drug law history.” United States Food and Drug Administration.
Swann, John. “FDA’s origins and history.” United States Food and Drug Administration.
The Medicine and Madison Avenue website.

http://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/mma
Marcus, Donald M.; and Grollman, Arthur P. “The consequences of ineffective regulation of dietary supplements.” Archives of Internal Medicine, 2012, 172(13): 1035-1036.
Greene, Jeremy A.; Podolsky, Scott H. “Reform, regulation, and pharmaceuticals — The Kefauver–

Harris Amendments at 50.” New England Journal of Medicine, 2012, 367(16): 1481-1483.


October 18 Friday

Hospitals and Dispensaries in American History
The Centre for History in Public Health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. The Voluntary Hospitals Database.

http://www.hospitalsdatabase.lshtm.ac.uk/
Medicine and Western Civilization. “Florence Nightingale.” p. 360.
Medicine and Western Civilization. “Massachusetts General Hospital.” p. 365.
Horner, Frederick. “A plea in behalf of a naval hospital for inebriates.” JAMA, 1886, 6(10): 253-257.

“Annual Report of the Supervising Surgeon-General of the Marine Hospital Service of the United States, for the Fiscal Year 1885.“ JAMA, 1886, 6(4): 110-111.

“More hospitals than money for the sick.” JAMA, 1889, 12(8): 271-272.


Prince, L. H. “The fire protection of hospitals for the insane.” JAMA, 1891, 17(5): 199.
“Letter from New York.” JAMA, 1891, 17(9): 350-351.

“ The ambulance service of general hospitals in cities: ‘The little ward on wheels’.” JAMA, 1891, 17(22): 858-859.

Gihon, Albert L. “The hospital: An element and exponent of medical education.” JAMA, 1892, 18(13): 375-381.


The ‘breathing’ hospital.” JAMA, 1892, 19(3): 86-87.

“Hard times and free medicine.” Reprinted from October 27, 1893 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1993, 270(15): 1798.


“Hospital spread of smallpox.” Reprinted from June 16, 1894 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1994, 271(23): 1812b.
The hospital hotel.” Reprinted from January 11, 1896 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1994, 272(4): 324.

“Medical superintendents for public institutions.” JAMA, 1895, 25(9): 378.

Lee, Benjamin. “Isolation hospitals for contagious diseases other than smallpox.” JAMA, 1895, 25(10): 406-408.

Leal, J. L. “Advantages to a community of a hospital for contagious diseases.” JAMA, 1895, 25(10): 408-409.




“Euthnasian home for New York City.” JAMA, 1895, 24(23): 902-903.

“New York City hospitals and their visiting staffs.” JAMA, 1895, 25(18): 775.


Davis, Thomas A. “The clinical value of the free dispensatory.” JAMA, 1896, 26(6): 275-277.
“Concerning dispensaries.” JAMA, 1896, 27(9): 500-501.
“Medical grievances.” JAMA, 1896, 27(6): 334.
“The ambulance in American cities.” Reprinted from January 9, 1897 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1997, 277(4): 272.
“The dispensary and hospital abuse in New York City.” JAMA, 1897, 18(15): 710-711.
Fischer, George, Von Klein, Carl H. “Surgery one hundred years ago. An historical study.” JAMA, 1897, 28(17): 793-795.
“The abuse of medical charity; A critical review of recent literature.” Reprinted from March 12, 1898 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1998, 279(10): 734.
“The dispensary abuse.” Reprinted from May 13, 1899 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 1999, 281(18): 1674.
Right to establish hospitals.: JAMA,, 1898, 21(18): 663.

“Hospital organization.” Reprinted from October 6, 1900 issue of JAMA. JAMA, 2000, 284(16): 2029.


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“A decade of Hill-Burton Hospital funds.” American Journal of Public Health 1956 (46): 1576-1577.
Rosenberg, Charles E. "The origins of the American hospital system." Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine 1979 (55): 10-21.
Rosenberg, Charles E. "Social class and medical care in nineteenth century America: The rise and fall of the dispensary." In Sickness and Health in America. Pp. 273-286, 1985 edition.
Light, Donald W. "Corporate medicine for profit." Scientific American 55 (6): 38-54, 1986.
Rothman, David J. "The hospital as caretaker: The Almshouse past and the intensive care future." Transactions and Studies of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia 1990 (12): 151-174.
Rosenberg, Charles E. "Looking backward, thinking forward: The roots of the hospital crisis." Transactions and Studies of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia 1990 (12): 119-126.
Greenbaum, Louis S. “Thomas Jefferson’s University of Virginia and the Paris hospitals on the eve of the French Revolution.” Medical History 1992 (36): 306-319.
Risse, Guenter B. and John H. Warner. "Reconstructing clinical activities: patient records in medical history." Social History of Medicine 1992 (5): 183-205.
Reynolds, P. Preston. “The federal government’s use of Title VI and Medicare to racially integrate hospitals in the United States, 1963-1967.” American Journal of Public Health, 1997 (87): 1850-1858.
Levi, Jeffrey. “Managed care and public health.” American Journal of Public Health, 2000 (90): 1823-1824.
Reynolds, P. Preston. “Professional and hospital discrimination: and the US Court of Appeals Fourth Circuit 1956-1967.: American Journal of Public Health 2004 (94): 710-720.
Kisacky, Jeanne S. “Restructuring isolation: Hospital architecture, medicine, and disease prevention.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 2005 (79): 1-49.

Thomas, Karen K. “The Hill-Burton Act and civil rights: Expanding hospital vare for Black Southerners, 1939-1960.” Journal of Southern History 2006 (72): 823-870.


Perkins, Barbara B. “Designing HIGH-COST medicine hospital surveys, health planning, and the paradox of progressive reform.” American Journal of Public Health 2010 (100): 223-233.
Shen, Yu-Chu; and Hsia, Renee Y. “Changes in emergency department access between 2001 and 2005 among general and vulnerable populations.” American Journal of Public Health 2010 (100): 1462-1469.
Abel, Emily. “Patient dumping in New York City, 1877–1917.” American Journal of Public Health 2011 (101): 789-795.
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