Bizarre Medicine


Book Description

This encyclopedia explores historical and contemporary fringe remedies seen as strange, ridiculous, or even gruesome by modern Western medicine but which nevertheless played an important role in the history of medicine. From placing leeches on the neck to treat a cough to using crocodile dung to prevent pregnancy, a number of medical treatments that now seem unusual were once commonplace. While a few of these remedies may have been effective, most were either useless or actually counterproductive to good health. Even today, there are alternative and fringe treatments considered bizarre by mainstream medicine yet used by hundreds of thousands of people. Bizarre Medicine: Unusual Treatments and Practices through the Ages offers a fascinating look into the history of medicine. Entries are organized by disease or medical condition and explore the folk and traditional "cures" used to treat them. Explanations are provided for why some treatments may have worked and why others may have done more harm than good. In addition, entries provide a clear description of the causes, symptoms, and current treatment options for each condition based on current scientific understanding. Each entry also discusses the condition's enduring impact on society and the arts.




Mortality Statistics of the Seventh Census of the United States, 1850: Embracing -- I. -- the Cause of Death, II. -- the Age and Sex, III. -- the Color and Condition, IV. -- the Nativity, V. -- the Season of Decease, VI. -- the Duration of Illness, VII. -- the Occupation, of the Persons Reported to Have Died in the Twelve Months Preceding the First of June of that Year, with Sundry Comparative and Illustrative Tables


Book Description




Bibliography and Reel Index


Book Description

A bibliography of United States Decennial Census Publications for 1790-1970 and a reel index for the microform collection of these publications.