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ARTICLE |

PREVENTIVE MEDICINE AS APPLIED TO TUBERCULOUS PATIENTS

LINSLY R. WILLIAMS, M.D.; ALICE M. HILL, A.B.
JAMA. 1929;92(10):774-775. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02700360012004.
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ABSTRACT

"Every one loves to give advice" is considered an axiom. Yet the National Tuberculosis Association has learned that in at least one-fourth this "axiom" must sink to the level of a superstition. Physicians who are called on by tuberculous patients for medical advice are by no means unanimous in imparting as much as might be expected.

The association has procured histories of 1,499 white patients prior to their first admission to a sanatorium. All were at least 15 years of age and all were diagnosed as having pulmonary tuberculosis at the time they entered. The histories, taken by physicians associated with the institutions, were obtained in considerable detail. They cover the symptoms of the illness; the reason for the first consultation of a physician; the various kinds of physicians (general practitioner, tuberculosis specialist, throat specialist, tuberculosis clinic) consulted by each patient, with the extent of the examination given and the

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