Entry Nos. 11000–11099
99 Garrison-Morton entries in this range.
1941 CE
#11000
The medical reports of John Y. Bassett, M.D., the Alabama student. Edited by Daniel C. Elkin.
Bassett was the subject of William Osler's famous essay, "An Alabama Student."
1934 CE
#11001
Postures & practices during labor among primitive peoples: Adaptations to modern obstetrics, with chapters on taboos & superstitions & postpartum gymnastics.
1933 CE
#11002
Medical women of America: A short history of the pioneer medical women of America and of a few of their colleagues in England.
Digital facsimile from the Hathi Trust at this link.
1929 CE
#11003
The history of hemostasis.
Reprinted with additions and corrections from Annals of Medical History, N. S. Vol. I, No. 2, March, 1929.
1929 CE
#11004
Stretchers: The story of a hospital unit on the western front.
History of the U.S. Army American Expeditionary Forces Evacuation Hospital no. 8, World War 1, 1914-1918, in which Pottle served. Pottle was the greatest Boswell and Samuel Johnson scholar. Digital facsimile from the …
1928 CE
#11005
A medical review of Soviet Russia.
Gantt went to Russia in the 1920s with the American Relief Administration, and became a student of Pavlov. Moving to Johns Hopkins in 1929, he founded the Pavlovian Laboratory, and devoted his career to understanding …
1925 CE
#11006
The life of Sir William Osler. 2 vols.
Cushing received the Pulitzer Prize for this masterful biography, which remains the essential account of Osler's life, work, and selections from his correspondence. Cushing donated his very extensive research material…
1925 CE
#11007
Beginnings of medical education in and near Chicago: The institutions and the men.
Digital facsimile of separately paginated 144pp. illustrated offprint from the Internet Archive at this link.
1923 CE
#11008
A history of the Massachusetts Medical Society: With brief biographies of the founders and chief officers, 1781-1922.
Digital facsimile from the Internet Archive at this link.
1987 CE
#11009
Disease and discovery: A history of the Johns Hopkins School Hygiene & Public Health 1916-1939.
1921 CE
#11010
Diagnosis of protozoa and worms parasitic in man.
1919 CE
#11011
The story of U.S. Army Base Hospital No. 5
An account of the Base Hospital in which Cushing served in World War I, based upon his wartime diaries. Limited to 250 copies, some of which were issued in cloth-backed printed boards, and others in printed wrappers. …
1996 CE–2006 CE
#11012
McGill medicine: The first half century, 1829-1885. McGill medicine: The second half century, 1885-1936. 2 vols.
The second volume was co-authored by Hanaway, Creuss, and James Darragh.
2016 CE
#11013
The General: A history of the Montreal General Hospital.
1918 CE
#11014
The medical report of the Rice Expedition to Brazil.
The expedition was led by Alexander H. Rice, Jr., an American physician, geographer, geologist and explorer noted for his expeditions to the Amazon Basin. "As a geographer and explorer Rice specialized in rivers.[1][7…
1915 CE
#11015
A study of prolonged fasting.
Study of a subject who was allowed to drink water but ingested no food for 31 days. Digital facsimile from the Internet Archive at this link.
1919 CE
#11016
Prostitution in Europe. Introduction by John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
"Publications of the Bureau of Social Hygiene". Digital facsimile from the Internet Archive at this link.
1912 CE
#11017
History of medical teaching in Trinity College Dublin and of the School of Physic In Ireland.
Digital facsimile from the Internet Archive at this link.
1946 CE
#11018
Harvey Cushing: A biography.
Remains the most comprehensive biography of Cushing, by his student Fulton.
1995 CE
#11019
The private science of Louis Pasteur.
"His biography of Pasteur was viewed as an outstanding work of scholarship which penetrated the secrecy that had surrounded much of the legendary scientist's laboratory work. Geison used Pasteur's laboratory notebooks…
1903 CE
#11020
The medical annals of Maryland 1799-1899. Prepared for the centennial of the Medical and Chirurgical Faculty.
Digital facsimile from the Internet Archive at this link.
1881 CE
#11021
The practice of medicine by women in the United States.
"Emily F. Pope, C. Augusta Pope, and Emma Call, doctors on the staff of the New England Hospital, published a study on women physicians. Their sample included a group of 430 women doctors who had graduated from variou…
1881 CE
#11022
The college story: Valedictory address to the twenty-ninth graduating class of the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania.
"Bodley sought to survey all the graduates of the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania from its founding 1850 through 1880. Of the total 276 graduates, 244 were alive. Her survey is based on the 186 graduates who r…
1995 CE
#11023
Catching babies: The professionalization of childbirth, 1870-1920.
Concerns the transition in the early 20th century in the United States from women midwives delivering most babies to professional obstetricians--mostly men--delivering almost all babies by the 1950s. It researches why…
1987 CE
#11024
Physiology in the American context, 1850-1940. Edited by Gerald L. Geison.
Traces the development of American physiology in the cultural context of the period. Divided into three parts: social and institutional history; physiology in relation to other fields; and instruments, materials and t…
1932 CE
#11025
English-speaking students of medicine at the University of Leiden.
Based upon an examination of the Album of Students at Leiden from 1575 to 1875. Digital facsimile from the Internet Archive at this link.
1931 CE
#11026
History of medicine in the province of Quebec.
Reprinted, with additions, from "The Storied Province of Quebec". Digital facsimile from the Hathi Trust at this link.
1989 CE
#11027
This idle trade: On doctors who were writers.
1979 CE
#11028
Dickens's doctors.
1999 CE
#11029
William Osler: A life in medicine.
The most significant biography of Sir William Osler since Harvey Cushing's work published in 1925.
2007 CE
#11030
Harvey Cushing: A life in surgery.
A less idolatrous biography of Cushing than Fulton's work of 1946.
1919 CE
#11031
“Album de la guerre”: Five hundred photographs, seventy drawings and thirteen articles by members of Base Hospital no. 4, U.S.A. . . . and Mobile Hospital no. 5, U.S.A. . . . covering a period of twenty-three months from May 8th, 1917 to April 8th, 1919.
2002 CE
#11032
Abortion in the ancient world.
2017 CE
#11033
Prostitution in the ancient Greek world.
1510 CE
#11034
La cyrogia di Miastro Bruno: Expertissimo in quella. Tradutta in vulgare.
Bruno da Longoburgo studied surgery in Bologna or possibly Padua, and practiced in the latter city, where he helped found the University of Padua. His Chirurgia magna, completed in 1252, antedates those of Lanfranch, …
1976 CE
#11035
Hallucinogenic plants of North America.
1814 CE–1819 CE
#11036
Flore médicale. 7 vols.
The greatest work of medical botany published during the Napoleonic period; considered a masterpiece of color print production with 425 plates printed in color and finished by hand. The medicinal aspect appears to hav…
1982 CE
#11037
Origins of clinical chemistry: The evolution of protein analysis.
2017 CE
#11038
Hippocrate, Tome XII, 4e partie, Femmes stériles, Maladies des jeunes filles, Superfétation, Excision du foetus. Texte établi, traduit et annoté par Florence Bourbon.
Edition of the Greek text with facing French translation and commentary of four gynecological treatises from the Hippocratic Collection, from c. 470-350 BCE: De sterilibus = On sterility; De virginum morbis = On disea…
2019 CE
#11039
Medical practice in twelfth-century China. A translation of Xu Shuwei's Ninety discussion [cases] on cold damage disorders by Asaf Goldschmidt.
"An annotated translation of Xu Shuwei’s (1080–1154) collection of 90 medical case records – Ninety Discussions of Cold Damage Disorders (shanghan jiushi lun 傷寒九十論) – which was the first such c…
1999 CE
#11040
Origin of HIV-1 in the chimpanzee Pan troglodytes troglodytes.
Order of authorship in the original paper: Gao, Bailes, Robertson, Hahn. Demonstration, led by Hahn, that HIV-1 originated specifically in the chimpanzee--a mutant of the chimp SIV (SIV-cpz) which acquired mutations s…
2006 CE
#11041
Chimpanzee reservoirs of pandemic and nonpandemic HIV-1.
Order of authorship in the original paper: Keele, Van Heuverswyn, Li, Hahn. Definitive proof that SIVcpz circulated and existed in wild chimps in a given area of Africa, and that a mutation of this specific SIV in Afr…
1986 CE
#11042
The T4 glycoprotein is a cell-surface receptor for the AIDS virus.
Order of authorship in the original paper: McDougal, Maddon, Dalgleish. The authors discovered that the T4 lymphocyte cell has an outer glycoprotein on its surface that specifically acts as the receptor for HIV. Witho…
1977 CE
#11043
An amazing sequence arrangement at the 5' ends of adenovirus 2 messenger RNA.
Discovery of introns. In 1993 Roberts shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Phillip A. Sharp "for their discoveries of split genes." It was frequently suggested that Chow deserved a share of that prize…
1977 CE
#11044
Spliced segments at the 5' terminus of adenovirus 2 late mRNA.
Discovery of introns simultaneously with Roberts, Chow, Broker (No. 11043). Sharp's electron microscopist, Berget, visualized the introns in the electron microscope. James D. Watson took note of the profound significa…
2013 CE
#11045
A novel prion disease associated with diarrhea and autonomic neuropathy.
Order of authorship in the original paper: Mead, Gandhi, Beck, Collinge. Collinge was the main author. Digital facsimile from nejm.org at this link. (Thanks to Juan Weiss for this entry and its interpretation.)
2003 CE
#11047
Medicinal substances in Jerusalem from early times to the present day. (BAR International Series 1112).
2012 CE
#11048
Medical prescriptions in the Cambridge Genizah Collections: Practical medicine and pharmacology in medieval Egypt. Cambridge Genizah Studies Series, Volume 4.
2016 CE
#11049
Arabian drugs in early medieval Mediterranean medicine.
1997 CE
#11050