Reports of Societies

1878 BMJ (Clinical Research Edition)  
A6tfEt 4ty, #&that-he wil not be bntlbmka I dduld gi've hsitri$d#'O 1eNinAlss-tration. Bst -w -skutld tbominal attendaucstekse tWkl Slib responsibidssupsblavblise on his shouMetl § S?elItht~retils of casesaess n*o.ceiiaistaathat we canmake quite stye dFt gbodi d B utif a medhkxd mnu stand-out apinst a comulaMe44--deft*t h*1ol&i his pint-orE he! h. a cousltant, not of h4. batL of l}is p&tiett';-selection4 imposed&-on him;* or shoudd the paWMel iM*hinefdft1Rd6 get, outof doors, the -first visit
more » ... id is to a "hoit, wht , h %Irdb*by not knowing anything of the-disputt or of the ede,oit5osibykee$ the case; ari possibly he may be wroaigly hfotiheO *-it pr&ht* attendance. My advice to yourng practitioner5,-ahd: t6od14 t,ii thrij? a soon as the patien-t or friends-aFe making minutt&And-ahkiotts inculee as to the naturez, danger,and probable ditratibw of ariillnelk, it is -bZ far the wiser plan. to propose a consuiltation, whebpbythe seflethdiftIi the consultant remains with the medicalt at*tient; and-shQtlid tle consultatioat be deined-, shoul4-any unto*ard syt1pt6*W soccit, the attendant will retain confidence, infsasuclr as he saw-the cate was serious; thus he-retains; comnad -of the -situatiOt. there are men who, constauilr grfsse tonibt--ny one. These *At &bnfttMtlY-lbsing patints arid credi;-, Again, there are doubtless eases in which the complaint; ft rs-tht-usiti -ttendant of *ant of loyalty on the part of
doi:10.1136/bmj.2.920.272 fatcat:4mae5njiz5gofejrclqoi5kt7q