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Dr Cabot and Mr Hyde

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CrennerChristopher, Private practice: in the twentieth-century medical office of Dr Richard Cabot, Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005, pp. xv, 303, illus. £32.00 (hardback 0-8018-8117-X).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 July 2012

Christopher Lawrence
Affiliation:
Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL, 210 Euston Road, London NW1 2B3, UK
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Abstract

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Type
Essay Review
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2006. Published by Cambridge University Press

References

1 Jean E Ward and Joan Yell (eds), The medical casebook of William Brownrigg, M.D., F.R.S. (1712–1800) of the town of Whitehaven in Cumberland, Medical History, Supplement no. 13, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 1993.

2 See Theodore M Brown, ‘George Canby Robinson and “The patient as person”’, in Christopher Lawrence and George Weisz (eds), Greater than the parts: holism in biomedicine 1920–1950, New York and Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1998, pp. 135–60.

3 See W R Albury and Steven J Cross, ‘Walter B. Cannon, L. J. Henderson, and the organic analogy’, Osiris, 2nd ser., 1987, 3: 165–92.

4 Richard C Cabot and Russell L Dicks, The art of ministering to the sick, New York, The Macmillan Company, 1936, p. 119.

5 Ibid, p. 123.

6 Ibid, p. 7.

7 Christopher Lawrence, ‘Edward Jenner's Jockey Boots and the great tradition in English medicine 1918–1939’, in Christopher Lawrence and Anna-K Mayer (eds), Regenerating England: science, medicine and culture in inter-war Britain, Amsterdam, Rodopi, 2000, pp. 45–66.

8 Cabot and Dicks, op. cit., note 4 above, p. 5.