Publication information
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Source: American Medical Journal Source type: journal Document type: editorial column Document title: “Notes” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: October 1901 Volume number: 29 Issue number: 10 Pagination: 490-91 |
Citation
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“Notes.” American Medical Journal Oct. 1901 v29n10:
pp. 490-91.
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Transcription
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excerpt
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Keywords
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Named persons
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none.
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Document
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Notes [excerpt]
If another president or most eminent
personage become the victim of the assassin’s method, or if such an one be seriously
wounded in any other way, we suggest that he or she be spiritd [sic]
away out into some isolatd [sic] section where a good old country doctor
unmolestd [sic] and unhamperd [sic] may treat the case according
to his own good notions with just such means as are at hand, thereby allowing
such illustrious one the largest chance of recovery. The continuous fuss and
feather about counting the blood, taking temperature, noting heart beats and
enumerating respirations and all these gone over several times a day, to the
annoyance and hurt of the mortally wounded president, is what calls forth this
item.
Again, it may be said that a board of eminent
surgeons who gave out right along and even to the seventh day after the wounding
of our late and most illustrious president, an average pulse beat of 120; respiratien
[sic] 26; temperature above a hundred degrees, and invariably supplementing
the pathological report with the assurance that the patient was getting well;
we say that a board of surgeons, eminent or no eminency that would do so, deserves
the keenest kind of general and special criticism. And that they meant to deceive
the people; or else that they themselves were ignorantly unaware, was evidenct
[sic] by the matter of allowing the vice-president to absent himself
in a way and to such extent that great inconvenience resultd [sic] to
him and anxiety to the nation.
Let the people be informd [sic] that in
any like case: given a daily temperature of exceeding a hundred degrees, Fahrenheit,
a circulation of 120 to 126 and a respiration of 26 to [490][491]
28 means death ninety-nine cases in every hundred. This is written before any
revelations which an autopsy may reveal have been given out, but we venture
that pus will have been found at seat of retained ball, or that a peritonitis
existed between the stomach and the parietes wound and further, that the stomach
puncturings will have been found closed.