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Titles
- A Field Hospital Station1
- A reply to Dr. Haygarth's "Letter to Dr. Percival, on infectious fevers": and his "Address to the College of Physicians at Philadelphia, on the prevention of the American pestilence," exposing the medical, philosophical, and literary errors of that author, and vindicating the right which the faculty of the United States have to think and decide for themselves, respecting the diseases of their own country, uninfluenced by the notions of the physicians of Europe1
- A view of the soil and climate of the United States of America: with supplementary remarks upon Florida; on the French Colonies on the Mississippi and Ohio, and in Canada; and on the aboriginal tribes of America1
- 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 climate of the United States: or, an inquiry into the causes of the difference in climate between the eastern side of the continent of North America and Europe ; with practical remarks on the influence of climate on agriculture, and particularly the cultivation of the vine1
- An inquiry into the various sources of the usual forms of summer & autumnal disease in the United States, and the means of preventing them: to which are added, Facts, intended to prove the yellow fever not to be contagious1
- An oration on the causes of the difference, in point of frequency and force, between the endemic diseases of the United States of America, and those of the countries of Europe : delivered, by appointment, to the "Philadelphia Medical Society," on the fifth day of February, 18021
- Collections for an essay towards a materia medica of the United-States1
- Pharmacopoeia1
- Ten letters to Dr. Joseph Priestly, in answer to his Letters to the inhabitants of Northumberland1
- The American dispensatory, containing the operations of pharmacy: together with the natural, chemical, pharmaceutical and medical history of the different substances employed in medicine; illustrated and explained, according to the principles of modern chemistry: comprehending the improvements in Dr. Duncan's second edition of the Edinburgh new dispensatory : the arrangement simplified, and the whole adapted to the practice of medicine and pharmacy in the United States : with several copperplates, exhibiting the new system of chemical characters, and representing the most useful aparatus1
- The Surgeon at Work at the Rear During an Engagement1
- Ward 41
- [John Shaw Billings]1