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ARTICLE |

THE WET DRESSING IN SURGERY

CHARLES A. PARKER, M.D.
JAMA. 1909;LIII(18):1467-1471. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.92550180001001h.
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In our eagerness to avail ourselves of the many new and sometimes very promising announcements in surgical progress it is well not to discard too lightly older methods and principles founded on long-established and successful usage. Into the field of treatment in recent years the hyperemia of Bier and the vaccine therapy of Wright have entered as active participants for our favor in the care of infectious processes. So prominent a position have they occupied that frequently other methods have been completely overshadowed, to the serious neglect and injury of the patient. With no desire to detract from all the demonstrated and promised virtues of these newer methods of treatment, I do wish to preserve the wet dressing from even the momentary neglect that threatens it and to place it in the proper rank to which its broad range of usefulness and long record of success entitle it

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