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ARTICLE |

REPORT ON THE SCHLEICH SOLUTION.

ROBERT MARSENA STONE, A.M., M.D.
JAMA. 1899;XXXIII(19):1123-1128. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.92450710005001a.
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ABSTRACT

Lawson Tait, the great Birmingham surgeon and acute controversialist, has been very quiet of late years and has not stirred up the American brethren as of yore, but he wrote a few words, shortly before his recent death, which did not need his name appended to identify them. He expressed his amusement at an article by a layman in the Nineteenth Century, recommending that "each one should refuse to take chloroform or ether without a guarantee that it should be administered on an open cloth and the time used to put them under should not be less than eight minutes." The layman charges the most inexcusable indifference to the patient's comfort by the anesthetist, usually the youngest man on the staff, a fresh graduate, with theoretic training only.

Tait then says: "The whole thing is discreditable to our profession and absolutely subversive of any claim it may make as a

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