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The Elements of Medical Treatment.

JAMA. 1933;101(14):1103. doi:10.1001/jama.1933.02740390061049.
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ABSTRACT

This embodies an annual course of lectures. As the author says, it is not a complete treatise on medical treatment but merely a setting out of principles and their application to the commoner forms of disease encountered in practice, special attention being given to the prescription of drugs. Many of these, as well as quite a bit of the material offered, appear somewhat old fashioned. One gets the impression of a straining at giving general currency to the idea of "team-work" in drugs. The author favors four drug prescriptions patterned after the curare cito, tuto, et jucunde pattern. Unfortunately, the pleasantness part of it is too often sacrificed to the attempt to secure the other aims of this maxim in a more or less doubtful manner. Most of Dr. Hutchison's model prescriptions are indeed far from being pleasant. On the other hand, so much clinical wisdom is contained in this

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