Not only did the many positive changes from the later 1800s into the mid-1900s result in the massive decline in mortality from smallpox, measles, whooping cough, scarlet fever, etc., but another major factor was also causing deaths for centuries – t…
Not only did the many positive changes from the later 1800s into the mid-1900s result in the massive decline in mortality from smallpox, measles, whooping cough, scarlet fever, etc., but another major factor was also causing deaths for centuries – the medical treatments themselves.
Source: odysee.com/@RomanBystrianyk | July 9, 2023
References:
- Russell Thacher Trall, MD, Water-cure for the Million, 1860, New York, p. 11.
- Samuel Dickson, MD, Glasgow, The “Destructive Art of Healing;” or, Facts for families, Second Edition, 1855, London, pp. 5-6.
- Fallacies and Delusions of the Medical Profession
- Honest Confessions of Weakness,” Journal of Osteopathy, vol. IV, no. 5, October 1897, Kirksville, Missouri, p. 228.
- Emmet Densmore MD, How nature cures, comprising a new system of hygiene, 1892, p. 205.
- Henry Strickland Constable, Our Medicine Men: A Few Hints, 1876, p. 80
- “Statement of Mr. Henry R. Strong of St. Louis, Mo. Editor National Druggist,” The Pure Food and Drugs Act. Hearings before the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, Part I, 1912, Washington, Government Printing Office, p. 359.
- Thomas R. Hazard, Civil and Religious Persecution in the State of New York, 1876, Boston, p. 102.
- Dr. Eliphalet Kimball, Thoughts on Natural Principles, 1867.
- PBS NewsHour Is fatal medical error a leading cause of death? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-lDcWx3k0-0
- Retired anesthesiologist Richard Griffith, The Battle of Hospital Medical Errors, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LdTzZULwpw
- H. Brown, MD, “The use and abuse of medicines,” The American Practitioner and News, May 21, 1892, vol. XIII, no. 11, pp. 322-323.