Short Talks with Young Mothers on the Management of Infants and Young ChildrenG.P. Putnam's Sons, 1909 - 327 pages |
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Common terms and phrases
acid adenoids allowed appetite attack baby bath better boiled water boracic acid bottle bottle-fed bowels breast breast-milk bronchitis broth Castile soap catarrhal cause cent cereal cold colic condensed milk condition constipation cough cows daily diarrhoea diet digestive diphtheria disease feedings in twenty-four frequently furnish G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS given glands Gravity cream habit heat illness indigestion infant infection inflammation intestinal irritation Lime-water meal means ment Milk-sugar minutes months of age mother mouth mucous membrane napkin never night nipple normal nose nourishment nursery nursing nutrition ointment old linen one-half ounces pain patient peptonized physician pint placed pneumonia proteid result runabout scarlet fever seen skin sleep solution stale bread stewed sugar or butter summer symptoms tablespoonful teaspoonful teeth temperature theria throat tion tonsils Top milk treatment trouble twenty-four hours usually vomiting washed weeks weight wet-nurse whooping-cough young Zwieback
Popular passages
Page 16 - Spencer said a long time ago that to be a good animal is the first requisite to success in life, and to be a Nation of good animals is the first condition of National prosperity.
Page 325 - Add two tablespoonsful of essence of pepsin and stir just enough to mix. Let it stand until firmly jellied, then beat with a fork until it is finely divided, and strain. Warm to the proper temperature and inject without dilution.
Page i - Practice of Pediatrics. By CHARLES GILMORE KERLEY, MD, Professor of Diseases of Children, New York Polyclinic Medical School and Hospital. Octavo of 878 pages, illustrated.
Page 327 - TILL THE DOCTOR COMES; AND How TO HELP HIM. By George H. Hope, MD Revised, with Additions, by a New York Physician. Cloth, 60 cts. " A most admirable treatise; short, concise and practical.
Page iii - MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Baltimore.
Page 99 - DIET DURING ILLNESS The digestive capacity of every child is diminished during illness, the extent depending largely upon the age of the child and the severity of the disease. The younger the child, the greater the incapacity. This is fairly constant with all the ailments of childhood, including, of course, those which directly affect the gastro-enteric tract. Reduction in Food Strength. — In a moderately severe bronchitis, with a degree or two of fever, the digestive capacity is slightly diminished...
Page 97 - Put a teacupful (gill) of cold water and the powder contained in one of the peptonizing tubes* into a clean quart bottle and shake thoroughly ; add a pint of cold fresh milk and shake again ; then place the bottle in a pail or kettle of warm water — about 115 F. — or not too hot to immerse the whole hand in without discomfort. Keep the bottle in the water bath for from thirty to forty minutes or longer if a greater degree of pre-digestion seems necessary, then put it immediately on ice.
Page 113 - ... a fountain syringe, the bag of which should be held three or four feet above the patient's body. The child must lie on the back or left side, with legs well drawn up. The tip of the well-oiled catheter is passed into the rectum. When an introduction of two inches has been effected, allow the water to pass in slowly. The water will distend the parts and facilitate the further introduction of the tube. Press the folds of the buttocks together until the colon is filled. This in a child eighteen...