Publication information |
Source: Buffalo Medical Journal Source type: journal Document type: news column Document title: “Pan-American Notes” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: June 1901 Volume number: 40 Issue number: 11 Series: new series Pagination: 854-57 (excerpt below includes only pages 854-56) |
Citation |
“Pan-American Notes.” Buffalo Medical Journal June 1901 v40n11 (new series): pp. 854-57. |
Transcription |
excerpt |
Keywords |
Pan-American Exposition (medical matters). |
Named persons |
Vertner Kenerson; Roswell Park; Nelson W. Wilson. |
Document |
Pan-American Notes [excerpt]
T
The newspapers have been full of Pan-American
news and descriptions, but the most important part of the exposition has not
been exploited to any great extent. The medical department has kept in the back
ground, preferring to do its work without any midway hurrah or tom-tom beating.
The medical director, Dr. Roswell Park, has organised a most perfect hospital
service, a handsome building has been erected and occupied and fully equipped.
There are five doctors on duty, assisted by six nurses. Emergency cases are
taken to the hospital in an automobile ambulance, and after receiving first
aid are transferred to one of the city hospitals, the cases being divided among
the various institutions. The deputy medical director, Dr. Vertner Kenerson,
has charge of the hospital work, and Dr. Nelson W. Wilson is sanitary officer
of the exposition. [855][856] How well the health
of the big fair is safe-guarded may be realised when it is known that during
the first days of the exposition Drs. Wilson and Kenerson, under Dr. Park’s
direction, handled a small epidemic of measles and stamped out the disease without
creating a panic. Few people knew that a portion of the midway was under quarantine
rule for two weeks.