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ORTHOPEDICS OF TODAY

WALTER G. STERN, M.D.
JAMA. 1929;93(15):1109-1110. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02710150001001.
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ABSTRACT

The domain of medicine is not divided by arbitrary and inflexible rules into realms of endeavor with immutable and unchanging boundaries. Its progress is kaleidoscopic; the dividing lines between the specialties are forever changing; fields are enlarging and contracting. Each has its fruitful years, to be followed by more or less lean periods. The medical profession on the whole has always been quick to give recognition to any constituent group that most successfully helps it to solve its immediate problems, and, by its quick confidence in calling on the group for aid and consultation, to award it the palm of superiority.

So it is today with orthopedics.

Scarcely a decade ago, a large part of an executive session of one of the major orthopedic societies was taken up in the discussion of the proper spelling and the correct derivation of our title—was it from the Greek or was it a

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