Journal of Medical Biography
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Essays in Medical Biography
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Emery, A. Tags: Book Reviews Source Type: journals
Maritime Quarantine: The British Experience, ca. 1650-1900
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Hardage, J. Tags: Book Reviews Source Type: journals
Tropical medicine: an illustrated history of the pioneers
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Gibson, M. Tags: Book Reviews Source Type: journals
Astley Cooper's herniotome
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Kirkup, J. Tags: Who Made What? Source Type: journals
Medical student Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956)
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Bertolt Brecht was one of the most important dramatists of the 20th century. At the start of his career he studied literature but switched from the humanities to medicine. This paper discusses reasons for this switch, the influence of his medical experiences on his poetic work and why he eventually abandoned his medical career. His political development towards Marxism is described and a short sketch of his theory of theatre is given. He is considered the most important German-speaking dramatist of the 20th century. (Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Skrziepietz, A. Tags: Truants Source Type: journals
Henry Wellcome (1853-1936) and his institute
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: James, D G. Tags: Glimpses Source Type: journals
Leonard Craske (1878-1950): from medical student to sculptor
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Leonard Craske (1878–1950), born and raised in London, England, spent two years as a medical student at St Thomas' Hospital Medical School. Following this, he worked as an actor and studied drawing and sculpting. After emigrating to the USA and settling in Boston, he became an accomplished sculptor, creating the well-known Fishermen's Memorial in Gloucester, Massachusetts, the work for which he is best remembered. (Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Duke, M. Tags: Medical Truants Source Type: journals
John Singer Sargent (1856-1925) and his medical legacy
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: James, D G. Tags: Glimpses Source Type: journals
James Hector (1834-1907): doctor, geologist, explorer of Western Canada
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The objectives of the expedition were to explore the plains of North America along the 49th parallel of latitude, the recently agreed boundary between the USA and Canada, and investigate passes through the Rocky Mountains for possible railway passage. Hector's contribution was immense, his dedication and endurance contributing in large measure to the success of the venture. (Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Loosmore, B. Tags: Medical Truants Source Type: journals
Waldenstrom's syndromes
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: James, D G. Tags: Glimpses Source Type: journals
Tuberculosis in the Ottoman harem in the 19th century
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At least four of the sultans who ruled during the 19th century suffered from tuberculosis (TB), and probably many of the women and children in the harem too. Life there was crowded with low standards of hygiene, resulting in high mortality, especially among children. Infectious diseases were the main killers and TB was one of the many factors behind the decline and fall of the empire. (Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Baris, Y I., Hillerdal, G. Tags: Patients Source Type: journals
Alexander's (356-323 BC) expeditionary Medical Corps 334-323 BC
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Alexander had a profound interest in medicine and healing. Original Greek texts survive mainly from the works of Plutarch and Arrian. This paper examines original sources naming the physicians who participated in Alexander's expedition in Asia, the battle injuries he sustained and his final illness in Babylon. (Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Retsas, S. Tags: Patients Source Type: journals
Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900): a classical case of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) syndrome?
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Friedrich Nietzsche was one of the most influential and profound German philosophers. After prolonged illness, he died at the age of 55 in Weimar, Germany. The interest in his medical biography has always been strong while the cause of his illness and death has remained a mystery, intriguing philosophers as well as physicians. The diagnosis of syphilis proposed in the 19th century has been controversial until today and many other diagnoses have been discussed. This paper suggests that Nietzsche suffered from mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes syndrome. (Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Koszka, C. Tags: Patients Source Type: journals
Harley Street addresses and residents
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: James, D G. Tags: Glimpses Source Type: journals
The chemistry of light: the life and work of Theobald Adrian Palm (1848-1928)
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The chemistry of light examines the work of Dr Theobald Palm. After his graduation from Edinburgh University, Palm joined the Edinburgh medical mission and was sent to Niigata in Japan where he remained for 10 years. During this time he noted the absence of rickets (a disease rife in Britain) in Japanese children and instituted a survey from which he deduced that sunlight deficiency was implicated in the aetiology of rickets. Unfortunately, he was largely ignored by the medical world. This paper seeks to contextualize his work. By placing Palm's study within a historical and social framework, its reception can be explained...
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Ekpe, J. Tags: Missionaries Source Type: journals
Guillaume Dupuytren (1777-1835) and his contracture
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: James, D G. Tags: Glimpses Source Type: journals
Sir Hans Adolf Krebs (1900-81), pioneer of modern medicine, architect of intermediary metabolism
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Krebs was born in Hildesheim (North Germany) and graduated (MD) from the University of Munich in 1923. He was assistant to Otto Warburg (1926–30) who taught tissue slicing and manometry which Krebs used to complete his three great works: The Detoxification of Ammonia (Freiburg im Breisgau 1933), The Degradation of Foods to provide Energy for Life (Sheffield 1937) and Gluconeogenesis (Oxford 1963). He was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of London (FRS) in 1947, Nobel Laureate in 1953 and KBE in 1958. (Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Leigh, F W Tags: Biochemists Source Type: journals
15 Cavendish Square, London
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: James, D G. Tags: Glimpses Source Type: journals
Jonathan Osborne (1794-1864) MD FRCPI: a crypto-neurologist
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Jonathan Osborne was born in Dublin and educated in Trinity College Dublin, where he became Professor of Materia Medica. As physician to Sir Patrick Dun's and Mercer Hospitals he reported extensively on those patients who came under his care. In his native city he is remembered for the instruments he devised, for his studies on dropsies (particularly albuminuric nephritis), and for his therapeutic approach to epilepsy and neuralgia. It is his thorough analysis of a patient with conduction aphasia in 1833, however, which has stood the test of time. (Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Breathnach, C. S Tags: Neurologists Source Type: journals
Venereal disease and the great
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: James, D G. Tags: Glimpses Source Type: journals
George Guthrie's clinical trial at the Napoleonic War Battle of Toulouse in 1814
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George James Guthrie (1785-1856) was a British military surgeon who came to prominence during the Napoleonic Wars (1803-15). He wrote several books on military surgery and was President of the Royal College of Surgeons of England three times. However, his most innovative and important achievement has largely gone unrecognised by modern historians. In 1814, at the battle of Toulouse in the Peninsular Campaign, he performed a landmark early trial of the treatment of musket wounds to the thigh. Here we not only discuss this clinical trial and place it in its social context, but also present the pathological skeletal specimens...
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Malhan, N. K, Greenslade, T., Mitchell, P. D Tags: Surgeons Source Type: journals
Notes and Jottings
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Tags: Notes and Jottings Source Type: journals
Thomas Henry Osler (1875-1936): a descendant of Sir William Osler's great-uncle and the founder of a South African medical dynasty
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Sir William Osler's great-uncle Benjamin emigrated from England to South Africa with his wife and children in 1820. From Benjamin's son, Stephen, descended a large family of Oslers including at least seven doctors and dentists. This paper describes the lives and careers of Thomas Henry, and his medical and dental descendants. (Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Myers, E. D Tags: Physicians Source Type: journals
George N Papanicolaou (1883-1962) MD
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Frangos, C. C Tags: Medical Statues Source Type: journals
Edgar Haydon (1859-1942): general practitioner and radium pioneer
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Edgar Haydon was a general practitioner in Newton Abbot, Devon, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He introduced radium therapy to the cottage hospital in this small market town in 1914 at a time when many cities lacked this facility. He raised funds for the building of a cancer wing and an extension to the hospital that were completed in 1927. This paper describes his fund-raising efforts, some of his cases and the way in which radium treatment influenced the number of cancers treated in the hospital. The hospital's records are fragmentary and leave many questions unanswered about the practicalities of radium trea...
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Guy, J. M Tags: Physicians Source Type: journals
Book-collecting for medical biographers
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Nieman, E. Tags: Editorials Source Type: journals
Diagnostic reappraisal of disease in famous persons
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - August 31, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Goldman, A. S, Schmalstieg, F. C Tags: Editorials Source Type: journals
Doctors at War
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Ellis, H. Tags: Book Reviews Source Type: journals
Disease in the Merchant Navy: A History of the Seamen's Hospital Society
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Hardage, J. Tags: Book Reviews Source Type: journals
Sir Francis Fraser 1885-1964
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: James, D G. Tags: Book Reviews Source Type: journals
Prof. The Life of Sheila Sherlock 'The liver queen'
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Ellis, H. Tags: Book Reviews Source Type: journals
Hodgkin's tomb in Jaffa
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: James, D G. Tags: Memorials Source Type: journals
Where Ronald Ross (1857-1932) worked: the discovery of malarial transmission and the Plasmodium life cycle
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Dutta, A. Tags: Glimpse Source Type: journals
Sir James Edward Smith (1759-1828) MD FRS, botanist, co-founder of the Linnean Society of London
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James Edward Smith's interest in botany led him to enter medicine at Edinburgh in 1781. Smith was continuing his medical studies in London when Sir Joseph Banks (1743–1820) suggested to him that he should purchase the collection of the famous Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus that had just been offered to Banks. Smith bought the Linnean Collection and Library in 1784. In 1786 he was awarded the degree of Doctor of Medicine from Leiden. In 1788 Smith, with two associates, founded the Linnean Society of London and became President for life. Smith turned from medicine to natural history as a lecturer and writer. During h...
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Hawgood, B. J Tags: Truants Source Type: journals
Dr Edward Wilson (1872-1912): Antarctic Hero
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Edward Wilson was an artist, doctor, naturalist and explorer. He was on both Scott's Antarctic expeditions of the early 1900s, as Junior Surgeon and Zoologist on the Discovery expedition of 1901 and as Chief of Scientific Staff on the Terra Nova expedition of 1910. He reached the Pole with Scott in 1912 and died with him on their ill-fated return from the Pole. (Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Williams, I. Tags: Explorers Source Type: journals
Kaethe Kollwitz (1867-1945): the artist who may have suffered from Alice in Wonderland Syndrome
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Kaethe Kollwitz was a 20th century German artist who grew to fame for her socio-political impressions of Germany during World Wars I and II. In her diary, Kollwitz self-described symptoms of Alice in Wonderland Syndrome during her childhood. She complained of episodes where objects appeared to grow larger or smaller and perceptual distortions where she felt she was diminishing in size. This may explain why Kollwitz's artistic style appeared to shift from naturalism to expressionism, and why her artistic subjects are often shaped with large hands and faces. The distortion present in her visual art may have less to do with a...
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Drysdale, G. R Tags: Patients Source Type: journals
Samuel Alderman Lomas (1838-1901) the man with two gravestones, his brother Muscot Atkin Lomas (1840-1907) and their lives in Victorian asylums
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Samuel Alderman Lomas died in the Hertfordshire County Asylum, Hill End, St Albans in 1901. He was buried in the asylum cemetery where two gravestones bear his name. This paper traces his life history and that of his brother Muscot Atkin Lomas. Both were classed as idiots in Victorian society and spent most of their lives – from childhood until death – in asylums. (Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Hilton, C., Hilton, B. Tags: Patients Source Type: journals
What motivated Dr David Livingstone (1813-73) in his work in Africa?
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Born of humble beginnings in a Scottish mill-town, David Livingstone would become one of the great explorers of the 19th century, traversing 30,000 miles of unknown Africa. His pioneering spirit and inquisitive mind brought knowledge and discoveries in the fields of tropical medicine, linguistics, botany, zoology, anthropology and geology. While it can be argued that Livingstone exhibited contradictions and shortcomings as a man, he nonetheless grasped the imagination of Victorian Britain and helped to change European attitudes towards Africa forever. His numerous endeavours were undertaken under the banner of divinel...
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Beard, J. A S Tags: Missionaries Source Type: journals
Look but do not fix: the pioneers of interventional cardiovascular radiology
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The extension of endovascular radiological procedures to a one-stop combined investigation and treatment of cardiovascular disease has revolutionized clinical practice. The giants in this respect are Charles Dotter, working from Portland, OR; Mason Sones from the Cleveland Clinic; and Andreas Gruentzig from Zurich and latterly Atlanta, GA. Serendipity and lateral thinking were pivotal in developing procedures that are now routine. (Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Banerjee, A. Tags: Radiologists Source Type: journals
Notes and Jottings
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Tags: Notes and Jottings Source Type: journals
Alfred Francois Donne (1801-78): a pioneer of microscopy, microbiology and haematology
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Alfred François Donné is widely known in the scientific community as the discoverer of Trichomonas vaginalis, since he was the first to illustrate the parasite that later was recognized to cause vaginal infections. However, his other, less-known findings are equally important: he was also the inventor of the photoelectric microscope, with the assistance of his student Léon Foucault, as well as the first to apply photography to microscopic preparations (Daguerreotype). His research in microscopy extended to almost all human fluids that could be investigated and culminated in his famous Atlas, which was ...
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Diamantis, A., Magiorkinis, E., Androutsos, G. Tags: Pathologists Source Type: journals
John Aitken's chain saw
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Kirkup, J. Tags: Who Made What? Source Type: journals
Natan 'Nikolai' Abramovich Vigdorchik (1874-1954): social activism and public health in early 20th-century Russia
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Virtually unknown in the West, the physician Nikolai Vigdorchik is recognized in Russian-Soviet history for his role in introducing social security into Russia. He rose from Jewish working-class origins to a career that combined activism in labour rights and public health with extensive and path-breaking publications in social security, occupational safety and public health. He contributed more than 30 years of leadership to Soviet research and educational institutions devoted to occupational safety and health. Vigdorchik's 1935 publication on lead and hypertension is illustrative of his contribution to modern epidemiologi...
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Sharp, D. S, Tauger, M. B Tags: Public Health Doctors Source Type: journals
Notes and Jottings
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Tags: Notes and Jottings Source Type: journals
Dr Lazar Remen (1907-74): a forgotten pioneer in the treatment of myasthenia gravis
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Dr Lazar Remen (1907–74) was the first, in 1932, to describe the beneficial effect of prostigmine on a myasthenia gravis patient. His observation actually preceeded by two years Mary Broadfoot Walker's (1888–1974) paper, which is considered to be the landmark article on this association. (Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Ohry, A. Tags: Physicians Source Type: journals
George Higoumenakis (1895-1983): Greek dermatologist
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This paper describes the Higoumenakis sign, enlargement of the sternal end of the clavicle in patients with late congenital syphilis and the dermatologist after whom it is named. Several professors and doctors from the Medical School of the University of Athens opposed his actions especially at the University in Greece. His persistence led him to productive scientific activity in syphilis, leishmaniasis and psoriasis. He became a member of the Greek Parliament from 1964 to 1967 and eventually Minister of Hygiene – even though this may have been an imprudent political choice, due to the unstable socio-political status...
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Frangos, C. C, Frangos, C. C Tags: Physicians Source Type: journals
Reading Livingstone
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - April 28, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Larner, A J Tags: Editorial Source Type: journals
A Victorian Surgeon - a biography of James Fitzjames Fraser West (1833-83) Birmingham Surgeon
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - February 3, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Weir, S. Tags: Book Reviews Source Type: journals
Letter to the Editor
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - February 3, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Keynes, M. Tags: Letter to the Editor Source Type: journals
Europe's Physician - the various life of Sir Theodore de Mayerne
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(Source: Journal of Medical Biography)
Source: Journal of Medical Biography - February 3, 2009 Category: History of Medicine Authors: Parsons, M. Tags: Book Reviews Source Type: journals
