... which it may be thought proper to express. But no statement or discussion of it should take place before the patient or his friends, except in the presence of all the... Canada Lancet - Page 2601880Full view - About this book
| Medicine - 1824 - 216 pages
...visits should be made, but in concert, or by mutual agreement: no statement or discussion of the case should take place before the patient or his friends, except in the pretence of each of the •.illeiidint- gentlemen of the faculty, and by common consent : and no prognostications... | |
| Michael Ryan - Medical jurisprudence - 1836 - 608 pages
...visits should be made but in concert, or by mutual agreement: no statement or discussion of the case should take place before the patient or his friends, except in the presence of each of the attending gentlemen of the faculty, and by common consent ; and no prognostications should... | |
| American education society - 1838 - 470 pages
...discussion of the case should take place before the patient or his friends, and no prognostications shall be delivered which are not the result of previous deliberation and concurrence. Theoretical debates shall be avoided in consultations, as occasioning perplexity and loss of time ;... | |
| Clergy - 1838 - 456 pages
...discussion of the case should take place before the patient or his friends, and no prognostications shall be delivered which are not the result of previous deliberation and concurrence. Theoretical debates shall he avoided in consultations, as occasioning perplexity and loss of time ;... | |
| College of Physicians of Philadelphia - 1846 - 478 pages
...or attendants, as well as any opinions which it may be thought proper to express respecting thecase. But no statement or discussion of it should take place...or his friends, except in the presence of all the attending gentlemen of the faculty, and by their common consent ; and no opinions or prognostications... | |
| 1847 - 834 pages
...first in attendance should communicate the directions agreed upon to the patient or attendants, as well as any opinions which it may be thought proper to...faculty attending, and by their common consent, and no opinion* or prognostications should be delivered, which arc not the result of previous deliberation... | |
| Medicine - 1848 - 910 pages
...in attendance should communicate the directions agreed upon to the patient or his friends, as well as any opinions which it may be thought proper to...attending, and by their common consent ; and no opinions от prognostications should be delivered, which are not the result of previous deliberation and concurrence.... | |
| Thomas Percival - Medical ethics - 1849 - 214 pages
...visits should be made but in concert, or by mutual agreement ; no statement or discussion of the case should take place before the patient or his friends, except in the presence of each of the attending gentlemen of the Faculty, and by common consent ; and no prognostications should... | |
| Worthington Hooker - Medical ethics - 1850 - 332 pages
...in attendance should communicate the directions agreed upon to the patient or his friends, as well as any opinions which it may be thought proper to...consent ; and no opinions or prognostications should be L 2 delivered, which are not the result of previous deliberation and concurrence. § 4. In consultations,... | |
| College of Physicians of Philadelphia - 1851 - 570 pages
...in attendance should communicate the directions agreed upon to the patient or his friends, as well as any opinions which it may be thought proper to...in the presence of all the faculty attending, and bytheircommon consent; and no opinions or prognostications should be delivered which are not the result... | |
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