Showing Collections: 831 - 840 of 884
U.S. Surgeon-General's Office medical history of the departments of the Ohio and the Cumberland during the year 1862
General medical history, also containing case reports for John Stanton, Tobias Duell, Henry Fay, Henry Thorncroft, Baylor H. Thinell and Marvin Garrison, all of whom died by disease in October 1862 at general hospital no. 6 in Nashville, or general hospital no. 14.
U.S. Surgeon-General's Office medical report of the Second Corps at the Battle of Gettysburg
Seventeen-page report from Justin Dwinell, surgeon in charge of the Second Corps hospital at Gettysburg, and A. W. Laugherty medical director of the Second Corps.
U.S. Surgeon-General's Office report of the operations of the Medical Dept. of the Army of the Tennessee
Report on the medical operations of the Army of the Tennessee during its march from Atlanta to Savannah in November and December 1865.
U.S. Surgeon-General's Office Sanitary Report of the Army of Arkansas
Sanitary reports sent to the Surgeon General summarizing events and activities in the Dept. of the Arkansas "from its occupation to Dec. 31st, 1864." as signed by Joseph R. Smith, Surgeon, U.S.A., Med. Dir., Dept. of Arkansas.
U.S. War Dept. Army Data Collection
Miscellaneous orders relating to daily activities for U.S. Army regiments traveling and stopping at forts and camps along the Mississippi River, 1808-1809.
USPHS hospital at Carville, La. oral histories
UNPROCESSED COLLECTION. 63 video interviews (betcam and VHS), adminstrative records, interviewee releases, interview transcripts of patients and staff af the National Hansen's Disease Program. DVD dubs available.
US/USSR Psychiatry Delegation Records
Correspondence, reports, drafts, psychological testing instruments, subject files, and audio and video recordings which document a 1989 joint NIMH/U.S. State Department delegation visit to the Soviet Union to assess the state of Soviet psychiatry. The delegation focused on the diagnosis status, treatment, and human rights protections given to political and religious dissidents who had been involuntarily committed to psychiatric hospitals.
Valentine Mott Papers
From 1811 to 1834 Mott was in very extensive practice as a surgeon, and most successful as a teacher and operator at Columbia University and New York University. He also served on the board of the U.S. Sanitary Commission during the Civil War. He was on the founding faculty of the university medical college of New York (New York University School of Medicine).
Venereal disease as a military problem newspaper clippings collection
A collection of newspaper clippings apparently collected by the Preventive Medicine Service's Venereal Disease Control division.
Vernon E. Wilson Papers
Dr. Vernon E. Wilson (1915-1992) was a nationally known leader in medical education and an innovative administrator of medical programs in academia and government. Although the collection covers the years 1953 through 1981, the bulk of the records were created in the 1970s.