ispheres, in connection with its
effect on the hemoglobin, and other elements of the blood, in
lessening the reception and internal distribution of oxygen,
might be the cause of both the perpetuation of her weakness, and
her mental disorder. I advised a trial of its entire omission,
and the giving of only simple nourishment, and moderate doses of
strychnine and digitalis, as nerve tonics. My advice was
followed, though not without much hesitation on the part of her
friends. The result, however, was entire recovery from the
mental disorder, and some improvement in her general health."
Puerperal mania resulted in one case cited, from the use of a moderate
amount of wine at mealtimes; when the wine was abandoned the mania
subsided.
CHAPTER XII.
WHY DOCTORS STILL PRESCRIBE ALCOHOLICS.
Workers in the department of Medical Temperance of the Woman's Christian
Temperance Union are told repeatedly by the better class of physicians
that they would be glad often not to prescribe alcohol if patients and
their friends would not insist upon its use. There is a deep-rooted
prejudice in favor of alcohol as a remedy in the minds of the great
multitude of people, and they are ready to distrust as fanatical, or
incompetent, any physician who does not use it. Dr. Norman Kerr, a
well-known physician of England, says, that during a ten years'
residence in America, he found people unwilling to pay him as much for
his services as they were willing to pay one who prescribed alcoholics.
Even those who were abstainers from liquors as beverages distrusted him
for not using these things as medicines. Indeed, this prejudice goes so
far with many that they will refuse to employ a non-alcoholic physician,
if they know him to be such. In consequence of this latter fact, there
are great numbers of skilful physicians who say nothing about alcohol
lest they be considered "faddists," and lose practice, but who never
prescribe it unless it is asked for by the patient or his friends.
Again, consulting physicians will sometimes insist upon the use of
alcohol, and thus seeds of distrust of the non-alcoholic physician will
be sown.
Dr. J. J. Ridge says of medical prescriptions:--
"Hundreds of medical men order alcoholic liquors from habit,
from ignorance of their real effect, from fashion, or from a
desire to please, or not to offend, their patients. Port-wine is
constantly being ordere
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