Finley Ellingwood

Finley Ellingwood was a doctor of Eclectic Medicine who is the author of the influential The American Materia Medica, Therapeutics and Pharmacognosy in 1919. Ellingwood was an active Chicago physician with many years experience, and an acknowledged expert in obstetrical/gynecological medicine. He was a vocal advocate of women physicians, and edited Ellingwood's Therapeutist for many years. His brand of Eclectic Medicine differed from the more subdued Cincinnati style as mentored by Scudder, Lloyd, Fyfe and Felter.[1]

The American Materia Medica, Therapeutics and Pharmacognosy is a serious medical text from the early 20th century, intended for practicing physicians and surgeons, which refers to difficult medical situations found in that period. There is an emphasis on physical diagnosis. The book is organized by organ system affected instead of by herbal name, so it will have headings like "Agents Acting on the Nervous System" or "Agents Acting on the Heart". This type of listing is somewhat controversial as herbal medicines tend to work on more than one system. The book had been substantially lost until it was scanned by herbalist Michael Moore in pdf format.[2] The book is also available in HTML format at Henriette Kress's website.[3]

Works

  • American Materia medica, Therapeutics and Pharmacognosy : developing the latest acquired Knowledge of Drugs, and especially of the direct Action of single Drugs upon exact Conditions of Disease, with especial Reference to the Therapeu tics of the Plant Drugs of the Plant Drugs of the Americas. - Evanston [Ill.] : Ellinwood's Therapeutist, 1919. Digital edition by the University and State Library Düsseldorf
  • A systematic Treatise on Materia medica and Therapeutics : with Reference to the most direct Action of Drugs. - Chicago : Chicago Medical Pr., 1902. Digital edition by the University and State Library Düsseldorf
  • A Synopsis of Medical Chemistry. - Chicago Veterinary College., 1889.
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gollark: There is, actually, in newer versions.
gollark: I personally hate the `.lua` autoaddition (yes, you can disable it...) but whatever.
gollark: `edit x.lua`
gollark: I mean, for a CC Urn project, what are you meant to do? The stupid NPM approach, where your compiled code is in the repo? The Github Pages bodge approach, with your compiled stuff in a different branch? CI? Manually making release zips or something and publishing them somehow?

References

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