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ARTICLE |

THE NEGLECT OF CLINICAL TEACHING.

JAMA. 1889;XII(10):343-344. doi:10.1001/jama.1889.02400870019003.
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ABSTRACT

A little more than a year ago "A Traveler from New Zealand" anathematized the whole system of medical education in the United States because of the (as he supposed) universal neglect of hospital attendance by medical students. The " Traveler from New Zealand " published a letter on the subject, in the New York Medical Journal, which called forth some letters of protest against "generalizing from insufficient data." Doubtless the generalizations of the traveler from the antipodes were too sweeping, since in some (a few) of the medical schools in this country the clinical teaching is of a high order; in others the clinical teaching is defective; in not a few it is, to all intents and purposes, omitted, or neglected by the students, since it is not compulsory. One may get an idea of the extent of clinical teaching in the medical schools in this country by referring to the annual

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