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Titles
- Domestic medicine, or, A treatise on the prevention and cure of diseases, by regimen and simple medicines: with an appendix, containing a dispensatory for the use of private practioners5
- Domestic medicine, or, A treatise on the prevention and cure of diseases, by regimen and simple medicines: with an appendix, containing a dispensatory for the use of private practitioners3
- Evidences of the efficacy of Doctor Perkins's patent metallic instruments3
- A guide to old age, or, a cure for the indiscretions of youth: in two volumes2
- Outlines of the theory and practice of midwifery2
- A chemico-medical essay to explain the operation of oxigene, or the base of vital air on the human body1
- A compendium of practical and experimental farriery, originally suggested by reason and confirmed by practice: equally adapted for the convenience of the gentleman, the farmer, the groom, and the smith ; interspersed with such remarks, and elucidated with such cases, as evidently tend to insure the prevention, as well as to ascertain the cure of disease1
- A compendium of practical and experimental farriery: originally suggested by reason and confirmed by practice, equally adapted for the convenience of the gentleman, the farmer, the groom, and the smith ; interspersed with such remarks, and elucidated with such cases, as evidently tend to insure the prevention, as well as to ascertain the cure of disease1
- A discourse relative to the subject of animation, delivered before the Humane Society of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, at their semiannual meeting June 13th, 17971
- A treatise on the structure, economy, and diseases of the liver: together with an inquiry into the properties and component parts of the bile and biliary concretions1
- A treatise on the theory and management of ulcers: with a dissertation on white swellings of the joints: to which is prefixed, an essay on the chirurgical treatment of inflammation and its consequences1
- A view of ehe [sic] science of life: on the principles established in The elements of medicine, of the late celebrated John Brown, M.D. ; with an attempt to correct some important errors of that work ; and cases in illustration, chiefly selected from the records of their practice, at the General Hospital, at Calcutta1
- An inaugural dissertation on that grade of the intestinal state of fever known by the name of dysentery: submitted to the examination of the Rev. John Ewing, S.T.P. provost, the trustees and medical faculty of the University of Pennsylvania ; on the 12th day of May, 1797 ; for the degree of Doctor of Medicine1
- 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 operation of pestilential fluids upon the large intestines, termed by nosologists dysentery: submitted to the public examination of the faculty of physic, under the authority of the trustees of Columbia College in the state of New-York, William Samuel Johnson, LL.D. president, for the degree of Doctor of Physic, on the 3d of May, 17971
- An inaugural dissertation on the production of animal heat: read and defended at a public examination, held by the medical professors, before the Rev. Joseph Willard, S.T.D. L.L.D. president, and the governors of Harvard College, for the degree of Bachelor in Medicine, July 10, 17971
- An inaugural dissertation, on the rheumatic state of fever: submitted to the examination of the Rev. John Ewing, S.T.P. provost : the trustees and medical faculty of the University of Pennsylvania ; on the 12th May, 1797 ; for the degree of Doctor of Medicine1
- An inaugural essay on dropsy, or the hydropic state of fever: submitted to the examination of the Rev. John Ewing, S.T.P. provost, the trustees and medical faculty of the University of Pennsylvania, on the twelfth day of May, 1797 ; for the degree of Doctor of Medicine1
- An inaugural essay on the effects of cold upon the human body: 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 12th day of May, 17971
- Medical inquiries and observations1