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Medical Notes on Climate, Diseases, Hospitals, and Medical Schools, in France, Italy, and Switzerland
Comprising an Inquiry into the Effects of a Residence in the South of Europe, in Cases of Pulmonary Consumption

This 1820 work on European medical treatment of tuberculosis also inaugurated Clark's research into the effects of climate on health.

James Clark (Author)

9781108064347, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 19 September 2013

280 pages
21.6 x 14 x 1.6 cm, 0.36 kg

Having trained in Edinburgh as a surgeon and served aboard Royal Navy vessels, Sir James Clark (1788–1870) developed a particular interest in the spread of the tuberculosis pandemic in Europe. A licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians from 1826, and elected to the Royal Society in 1832, he became a trusted physician and friend to Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. This early work of 1820 was based on his first-hand knowledge of the treatment of tuberculosis in southern Europe as well as the effects of climate on the disease. Among his tubercular patients in Italy around this time was the poet John Keats (who would succumb in 1821). Also reissued in this series are Clark's Treatise on Pulmonary Consumption (1835), his Memoir of John Conolly (1869), and The Influence of Climate in the Prevention and Cure of Chronic Diseases (1829), a development of aspects of the present work.

Preface
Note by the editor
Part I: Introduction
Marseilles
Hières
Nice
Villa Franca
Pisa
Rome (malaria)
Naples
On a summer residence
Lausanne and Geneva
The Vallais (cretinism)
Conclusion
Part II: Introduction
Paris
Lyons
Strasbourg
Bologna
Padua, Pavia
Turin
Genoa
Appendix.

Subject Areas: History of medicine [MBX]

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