Bonjour à toutes et tous
En faisant une recherche biblio professionnelle je vous ai trouvé dans le JAMA (Journal of American Medical Association)
Lessons from the war as to tuberculosis : situation in France de George E. BUSCHNELL
J Am Med Assoc. 1918;70(10):663-665.
L'article est payant, il n'y a pas de résumé, à défaut les 150 premiers mots de l’article ( in english of course) sont accessibles avec ce lien
http://jama.ama-assn.org/content/70/10/663.extract
J’en ai profité pour dépouiller tout ce N° de la revue il y avait aussi :
Medical mobilisation and the war
J Am Med Assoc. 1918;70(10):697-710.
Pour celui là article disponible avec ce lien
http://jama.ama-assn.org/content/70/10/ ... l.pdf+html
le livre suivant est présenté dans cette revue
Surgical Nursing in War.
Livre d'Elizabeth R. Bundy, M.D., Member of the Medical Staff, Woman's Hospital, Philadelphia. 184p, 37 illustrations. Philadelphia: P. Blakiston's Son & Co., 1917.
là encore les 150 premiers mots de la présentation de ce livre que je vous ai copié-collé
This little manual is especially planned for the graduate nurse, who, of necessity, must become a guide to inexperienced co-workers in times of emergency, because of the many untrained nurses employed in the large base hospitals of the war zone. Much attention is paid to wounds made by the various missiles of modern warfare, so that the nurse may differentiate among those caused by pointed bullets, shrapnel, high explosive shells, bombs, hand grenades, and the like. It is questionable as to just how much of this nurses will require. In a well planned chapter on surgical dressings, the Dakin-Carrel method of treating wounds is set forth with great clearness and illustrated with drawings of the Carrel instillation apparatus. The nurse is instructed in the emergency measures to be carried out in cases of threatened gangrene and severe shock, and in the administration of tetanus antitoxin.
Et enfin pour Laurent tout spécialement
An improved calliper method for Roentgen-Ray localization of foreign bodies
De H. C. Kariher et R. D. Brown
J Am Med Assoc. 1918;70(10):678.
The caliper method requires much calculation, and is subject to error. We have devised a slide rule that enables one to read the depth without calculation.
Metal pins are placed, like the rungs of a ladder, 1 cm. apart, and the ladder is placed perpendicularly between the table and the screen with the tube beneath the table, and the target 60 cm. from the screen. The tube is so placed under the ladder that the shadows of the pins are as but one in the central day; the screen is replaced by a plate, and a brief exposure is made with the diaphragm closed to admit only the central ray, to obtain 0. The tube is then shifted 12 cm. and a roentgenogram made on the same plate. This scale is transferred to the instrument illustrated, and thus the one minute depth measure is secured.
Bonne fin de journée
Bernard