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A Gift to Children During the Pandemic
- A Captivating Storyteller for Young Children During the Pandemic Let this wonderfully gifted librarian/educator lift the spirits of at-home children during the pandemic.
Blogs for Thinkers
- The Neuro Times ~ A treasure trove of information, engagingly presented, about history of neurology and the neurosciences.
Keynote Books
- The Last Family Doctor: Remembering My Father's Medicine ~ A memoir about a remarkable family physician and an earlier era of medicine.
Recommended
Websites Extraordinaire
- Antique Medical, Surgical, and Dental Instruments ~ Superb collection of old and strange medical devices, beautifully photographed.
- Digital Public Library of America ~ Knits together the holdings of major American libraries and archives into a single searchable collection. A scholarly feast.
- Medical Museion (University of Copenhagen) ~ Wonderful images, exhibition notes, and commentaries from this marvelous place.
- The Artwork of David Newman ~ The powerful and provocative paintings of the author of “Talking with Doctors” (Keynote Books, 2011).
- The Illustrations of Yuko Okabe ~ A generous sampling of the sparkling work of this remarkably gifted young illustrator.
- The Jewelry of Andrea Schettino ~ The online presentation is as exquisite as the handcrafted jewelry itself.
The Legendary Red Medicine
A Revolution In A Tube
Rene Laennec's wooden-tube, monaural stethoscope of 1816
A Low-Tech Wonder
James Mackenzie’s clinical polygraph of 1892 (show here in a refined version of 1914) permitted simultaneous tracings, via separate receivers, of the radial, venous, and arterial pulses. Used in conjunction with an even lower-tech instrument, the stethoscope, it allowed Mackenzie to make the first diagnosis of “auricular paralysis,” i.e., atrial fibrillation, in 1898.
How’s Your Blood Pressure?
Scipione Riva-Rocci's mercury sphygmomanometer of 1896, little different from mercury-column blood pressure meters of today
It Wasn’t Pretty But It Got The Job Done
The string-galvanometer EKG machine developed by Willem Einthoven between 1900 and 1903. All its key components relied on technologies that only became available in the 1880s. The machine initially confirmed clinical diagnoses of atrial fibrillation and heart block, but came into its own after James Herrick described EKG changes in myocardial infarction in 1918.
The Mighty B-D “Empire”
The Becton-Dickinson all-metal "Empire," a general utility syringe, was available in sizes from .25 to 8 ounces. It first appeared in the B-D catalog of 1911, where it was offered with a variety of tips for all manner of irrigation (nasal, ear, intra-trachael, intra-venous, urethral, and rectal).
Organotherapy, anyone?
Following the Mauritian physiologist Brown-Séquard’s report on the rejuvenating effects of testicular extract of 1889, physicians began prescribing extracts of the glandular organs of animals to remedy problems associated with the corresponding organ in the human body. Parke, Davis’s “desiccated ovarian residue,” in capsule form, was prescribed in the early twentieth century for conditions associated with ovarian dysfunction, especially menstrual disorders.