Medical Essays, 1842-1882 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 462 pages of information about Medical Essays, 1842-1882.

Medical Essays, 1842-1882 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 462 pages of information about Medical Essays, 1842-1882.

Again, invalidism is the normal state of many organizations.  It can be changed to disease, but never to absolute health by medicinal appliances.  There are many ladies, ancient and recent, who are perpetually taking remedies for irremediable pains and aches.  They ought to have headaches and back-aches and stomach-aches; they are not well if they do not have them.  To expect them to live without frequent twinges is like expecting a doctor’s old chaise to go without creaking; if it did, we might be sure the springs were broken.  There is no doubt that the constant demand for medicinal remedies from patients of this class leads to their over-use; often in the case of cathartics, sometimes in that of opiates.  I have been told by an intelligent practitioner in a Western town, that the constant prescription of opiates by certain physicians in his vicinity has rendered the habitual use of that drug in all that region very prevalent; more common, I should think, than alcoholic drunkenness in the most intemperate localities of which I have known anything.  A frightful endemic demoralization betrays itself in the frequency with which the haggard features and drooping shoulders of the opium-drunkards are met with in the streets.

The next proposition I would ask you to consider is this:  The presumption always is that every noxious agent, including medicines proper, which hurts a well man, hurts a sick one. [ Note B.]

Let me illustrate this proposition before you decide upon it.  If it were known that a prize-fighter were to have a drastic purgative administered two or three days before a contest, or a large blister applied to his back, no one will question that it would affect the betting on his side unfavorably; we will say to the amount of five per cent.  Now the drain upon the resources of the system produced in such a case must be at its minimum, for the subject is a powerful man, in the prime of life, and in admirable condition.  If the drug or the blister takes five per cent. from his force of resistance, it will take at least as large a fraction from any invalid.  But this invalid has to fight a champion who strikes hard but cannot be hit in return, who will press him sharply for breath, but will never pant himself while the wind can whistle through his fleshless ribs.  The suffering combatant is liable to want all his stamina, and five per cent. may lose him the battle.

All noxious agents, all appliances which are not natural food or stimuli, all medicines proper, cost a patient, on the average, five per cent. of his vital force, let us say.  Twenty times as much waste of force produced by any of them, that is, would exactly kill him, nothing less than kill him, and nothing more.  If this, or something like this, is true, then all these medications are, prima facie, injurious.

In the game of Life-or-Death, Rouge et Noir, as played between the Doctor and the Sexton, this five per cent., this certain small injury entering into the chances is clearly the sexton’s perquisite for keeping the green table, over which the game is played, and where he hoards up his gains.  Suppose a blister to diminish a man’s pain, effusion or dyspnoea to the saving of twenty per cent. in vital force; his profit from it is fifteen, in that case, for it always hurts him five to begin with, according to our previous assumption.

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Medical Essays, 1842-1882 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.