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ARTICLE |

Accident Insurance

J. H. Greene, M.D.
JAMA. 1909;LII(14):1123. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.02540400049017.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor:  —The case reported by Dr. Robert T. Morris in The Journal, March 13, under the title, "Appendicitis and Accident Insurance," induces me to report a case now going through the courts in Iowa.A traveling passenger agent, aged 62, in perfect health and an unusual specimen of physical manhood, who had never previously had a severe illness, found one morning that his regular defecation was impossible in consequence of agonizing pain in the rectum on the slightest attempt. After several ineffective efforts, at his wife's suggestion and in her presence he lubricated his finger with vaselin, and with difficulty removed from the rectum a piece of fish bone which had been caught there transversely. He recognized from the blood at the time that he had injured himself. This happened in Chicago on Monday morning. On Tuesday afternoon I saw him at my office, received the above history,

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