- A new system of phrenology1
- A new treatise on assimilation and digestion: showing the different solvent juices and fluids, their origin and their uses in the human system, the glands from which they are secreted and their relation to each other1
- A new way of training nurses1
- A novel proposition: revolutionizing the distribution of wealth : farm products moved as mail matter at a uniform rate for all distances : of interest alike to agriculture, manufacture, commerce and labor1
- A nurse at the war: nursing adventures in Belgium and France1
- A paper on diphtheria: read before the New York Academy of Medicine, January 18611
- A paper on intra-laryngeal growths1
- A paper on the vocal sounds of Laura Bridgeman, the blind deaf-mute at Boston: compared with the elements of phonetic language1
- A parent's manual (Volume 1)1
- A pathogenetic materia medica: based upon Drs. Hughes' and Dake's Cyclopaedia of drug pathogenesy1
- A philosophical and practical treatise on the will1
- A philosophical treatise on the passions1
- A physician's manual of vaccine therapy1
- A physician's sermon to young men1
- A pilgrimage, or, The sunshine and shadows of the physician1
- A pint of your blood may save a soldiers life1
- A pioneer of public health, William Thompson Sedgwick1
- A plain and practical discovery of the nature and cause of the secret disease: to which is appended, The grand impostor discover'd ; being remarks upon The practical and philosophical scheme of the secret disease : wherein is made appear ... the insufficiency of that author's royal specifick, ... to perform any radical cure, &c1
- A plain and practical treatise on the epidemic cholera: as it prevailed in the city of New York, in the summer of 1832 : including its nature, causes, treatment and prevention : designed for popular instruction : to which is added, by way of appendix, A brief essay on the medical use of ardent spirits : being an attempt to show that alcohol is as unnecessary and mischievous in sickness as in health1
- A plain system of medical practice, adapted to the use of families1