Showing Collections: 761 - 770 of 885
Surgeon-General's Office AIDS Subject Files Collection
Subject files/vertical file collection on the topic of AIDS maintained by the Surgeon-General's office largely during the C. Everett Koop administration.
Surgeon-General's Office biographical sketches of U.S. naval medical officers
Sketches requested of U.S. naval medical officers by the Surgeon General of the Army in 1933.
Surgeon-General's Office correspondence acknowledging receipt of circular nos. 1-7
Surgeon-General's Office hospital photographs acquisition letters
Collection of letters documenting transfer of hospital photographs to the Surgeon-General's Office, from various army posts around the country.
Surgeon General's Office papers referring to cholera and yellow fever in the Army
Reports and documentation produced by the U.S. Army Surgeon General's office describing outbreaks of cholera and yellow fever in various Army posts during the year 1867.
Surgeons General and other health administrators speeches collection
Speeches, articles, and statements of Surgeons General and other health administrators, U.S. Public Health Service.
Surgical cases observed at the Medical College of Georgia / Milo G. Hatch
Handwritten notebook of surgical procedures observed by Medical College of Georgia student Milo G. Hatch during the 1873-74 session. Procedures described are lithotomy, hydrocele, urinary calculus, wounds of cranium, amputation, compound comminuted fracture, and necrosis as attended by Drs. Henry William DeSaussure Ford, Louis A. Dugas, and William H. Doughty, Sr.
Sydenham Hospital Records
The bulk of the collection consists of patient medical case histories. Records are complete for the years 1909 to 1924, but because of the size of the collection, only a sample of every tenth record for the years 1924 to 1949 were retained. From 1909 to its closing in 1949, Sydenham Hospital was maintained by the Baltimore City Health Department for the isolation and treatment of communicable diseases such as polio, diphtheria, measles, scarlet fever, smallpox, and chicken pox.
Sylvester Day Papers
Sylvester Day joined the U.S. Army as a Garrison Surgeon's mate in 1807 and was at Fort Michilimackinac when it was captured in 1812.
Synopsis of style : index-catalogue of the Library of the Surgeon-General's Office
Instructions on the type size and style and arrangement to be followed in the Index-Catalogue of the Surgeon-General's Office, apparently for the first series.