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ARTICLE |

The Treatment of Fractures and Dislocations in General Practice.

JAMA. 1929;93(17):1332. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02710170064030.
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ABSTRACT

This provides a "ready work of reference" which should be of real service to the general practitioner, the house surgeon or the medical student. Although many books on fractures have been edited since the World War, this concisely written, well illustrated treatise should be of great value to this group for which it was intended. Startling new methods of treatment are not described, but the suggestions here given are a product of the experience gained during the Great War. The text is so aptly and completely illustrated and so clearly and simply set forth that a junior medical student with some knowledge of the anatomy of the region affected should be able to take it as a guide and successfully treat any simple fracture. The authors are impartial in their discussion of open reduction methods. They are inclined to be conservative in their program, and while they are neither radically

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