Добавил:
Upload Опубликованный материал нарушает ваши авторские права? Сообщите нам.
Вуз: Предмет: Файл:
МакМахон "Знание приобретенное или дарованное свыше (англ).pdf
Скачиваний:
20
Добавлен:
10.03.2016
Размер:
2.75 Mб
Скачать

Appendix 2 - Advent Review and Sabbath Herald

Editor - James White

“Dip(h)theria, its Causes, Treatment and Cure” by James C Jackson

As published in the Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, Feb 17, 1863,.

What 1 – Temperature Changes

J 6

Feb 17, 1863 - “Sudden and great changes in the degree of temperature of the atmosphere. ...

sudden changes of temperature common to our climate, in the autumnal, winter and spring seasons of the year, are to be found the efficient cause for the existence of this disease.”

Comment – If clothing is adjusted, there is no danger.

Score – Unverified

What 2 – Cool Air at Feet

J 7

Cool air at feet causes disease

 

Feb 17, 1863 – “a temperature that the stratum in which their feet are bathed, is from five to ten degrees lower than that which envelops their head, and you have another predisposing cause to the production of this disease.”

Comment – As hot air rises, it is normal for a gradient of temperature to develop between the floor and the ceiling. This is not a health hazard.

Score - Unverified

What 3 – Girls Dress

W 9 J 8 K 26

Girls dress so that their feet are cooler than the body.

Feb 17, 1863 – “the unhealthy way in which for most parents dress their girls, especially during the colder seasons of the year. A girl has a pair of calf-skin booties with stockings, a pair of pantalets coming a little below the knee, together with a short skirt, .... the lower portion of her body as to bathe it continually in air, which, if of low temperature, must necessarily produce constant and uninterrupted chilliness of the surface.”

July 7, 1863 – “D o you remember those evening parties, where you exchange the long sleeves for bare arms, the closed neck for a bare one, the worsted hose for the delicate silk, the Indian-rubber boot for the satin slipper!”

Comment – As long as there is no hypothermia, there is no health danger in the clothing of girls. In a cool climate the limbs should be kept warm.

Score – Minor

What 4 – Treating a Fever (W 68) (G 98) (C 4) J 14 (K 90)

Treat a fever by heating the patient until they profusely sweat.

Feb 17, 1863 - “In all cases, no matter whether the subjects are children or adults, I have uniformly, as the first thing to be done, given a hot bath. Its temperature .... ranging from ninety-eight to one hundred and ten degrees, the person sitting in it from five to thirty minutes, always however until profuse sweating was produced.”

Comment – This could be fatal: it is important to lower the temperature as soon as possible when there is a high fever.

Score - Unverified

What 5 – Treating Diphtheria

J 15

Heat the head and throat and cool the feet.

 

Feb 17, 1863 - “I then wrap the patient's throat and chest in wet bandages. .... with a wet cap upon his head, and hot flat-irons, or a jug of hot water, or hot dry woolen blankets at the feet.”

Score - Unverified

Don S McMahon

45

Соседние файлы в предмете [НЕСОРТИРОВАННОЕ]