- An account of the rise, progress, and termination, of the malignant fever, lately prevalent in Philadelphia: briefly stated from authentic documents1
- An account of the varioloid epidemic, which has lately prevailed in Edinburgh and other parts of Scotland: with observations on the identity of chicken-pox with modified small-pox : in a letter to Sir James M'Grigor1
- An account of the yellow fever, which occurred in the city of New-York, in the year 1822: to which is prefixed a brief sketch of the different pestilential diseases with which this city was afflicted, in the years 1798, 1799, 1803 & 1805 : with the opinion of several of our most eminent physicians respecting the origin of the disease, its prevention and cure : to which is added a correct list of all the deaths by yellow fever during the late season, taken from official documents1
- An accurate list of persons who have died of the malignant fever in this city: including those at Bellevue, &c. from July 29, to October 29, with the date of their deaths, also of the different places where the deaths occurred, and the number that died in each street1
- An address to the Philadelphia Medical Society, on the analogies between yellow fever and true plague: delivered, by appointment, on the 20th of February, 18011
- An authentic narrative of the melancholy occurrences at Bilston, in the county of Stafford: during the awful visitation in that town by cholera, in the months of August and September, 1832; to which are added the proceedings of the local board of health1
- An enquiry into the origin of the late epidemic fever in Philadelphia: in a letter to Dr. John Redman, president of the College of Physicians, from Doctor Benjamin Rush1
- An enquiry into, and observations upon the causes and effects of the epidemic disease, which raged in Philadelphia from the month of August till towards the middle of December, 17931
- An essay on Asiatic cholera: as it appeared in Cincinnati, O., in the years 1849, 1850, and 1866, with remarks upon its treatment, and a tabulated statement of one hundred and seventeen cases treated1
- An essay on epidemics: as they appeared in Dutchess county, from 1809 to 1825: also, a paper on diseases of the jaw-bones; with an appendix, containing an account of the epidemic cholera, as it appeared in Poughkeepsie in 18321
- An essay on the analogy of the Asiatic and African plague and the American yellow fever: with a view to prove that they are the same disease varied by climate and other circumstances1
- An essay on the bilious epidemic fever, prevailing in the state of New-York: to which are added, a letter from Dr. James Mann, hospital-surgeon ; and a dissertation by Dr. John Stearns, delivered before the state medical society, on the same subject ; with notes and observations on these productions1
- An essay on the bilious epidemic fever, prevailing in the state of New-York: to which is added, a letter from Dr. James Mann, surgeon-general to the Army; and a dissertation by Dr. John Stearns, delivered before the state medical society,on the same subject ; with notes and observations on these productions1
- An essay on the epidemic cholera of India1
- An essay on the epidemics of the winters of 1813 and 1814: in Talbot & Queen-Anne's counties in the state of Maryland1
- An essay on the malignant pestilential fever introduced into the West Indian Islands from Boullam, on the coast of Guinea, as it appeared in 1793 and 17941
- An essay on the pestilential or yellow fever: as it prevailed in Philadelphia in the year eighteen hundred and five1
- An essay on the prevailing, or yellow-fever, of 1817: together with preliminary observations, and an enquiry into the causes which produced it : also, a brief view of the effect of certain poisons on the animal economy, compared with those of the specific gaseous poison of the yellow-fever1
- An inaugural dissertation on the bilious malignant fever: bead at a public examination, held by the medical professors, before the Rev. Joseph Willard, S.T.D. president, and the governors in the university at Cambridge, for the degree of Bachelor in Medicine, July 10, 17971
- An inaugural dissertation on the effects of contagion upon the human body: being an attempt to ascertain its mode of operation, with a few observations on the proper method of preventing and curing febrile contagious diseases ; submitted to the examination of the Rev. John Ewing, S.T.P. provost, the medical professors and trustees of the University of Pennsylvania, for the degree of Doctor of Medicine, on the 19th day of May 17941