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ARTICLE |

PRACTICAL POINTS AND COMMON ERRORS IN THE TREATMENT OF STERILITY

EDWARD REYNOLDS, M.D.
JAMA. 1919;73(15):1099-1105. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610410001001.
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A now considerable experience in the management of reference cases of sterility has made the history of certain failures in diagnosis and treatment so familiar that it is easy to classify under a number of distinct headings those which occur most frequently. The fact that certain particular points turn up with such unvarying frequency makes it seem that a brief description of them might be of interest.

The classes so formed comprise sterilities due to mistakes in the marital relation; to neglect or failure to appreciate sterility in the male; the subjection of innocent abnormalities to unnecessary and nonproductive operations, and failures to detect evident causes of sterility from lack of special training in microscopic examinations.

Each one of these subjects would be sufficient to occupy an entire paper if fully discussed, and the attempt to treat them all within a single article necessarily implies a restriction of each of

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