President’s Address [excerpt]
The law regulating the practice
of medicine has been so amended as to place the examination of all
applicants in the hands of the State Board. The State Board is further
empowered to establish reciprocal relations with other State Boards
of Examiners, and to issue certificates without examinations to
surgeons of the army and navy and marine hospital service. While
the present policy of the association has done much more for the
profession than those of us who live in the centers of population
know and while the stability of the organization has been the chief
factor in attaining this end, yet it seems to me that the adoption
by the Board of some plan by which an applicant’s knowledge of the
art along with the science of medicine could be estimated, would
be productive of good results. There is a great demand today for
men who can do things and it is a source of congratulation that
few people in the State live beyond the reach of skilled medical
and surgical aid. Successful laparotomies and scientific accouchments
are not at all rare in the remote rural districts. I knew two young
men in the rural districts to do a laparotomy on a negro shot in
the abdomen; they stitched up two perforations of the stomach while
an attendant fanned the flies away. The negro made an uneventful
recovery. It was said that the wound was identical with the one
that killed President McKinley, and I have often thought of the
anguish that might have been spared the American nation if these
two boys from the hill country of Alabama, could have been in the
city of Buffalo on that fateful day.
|