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An Essay on Contagious Diseases / more particularly on the small-pox, measles, putrid, malignant, and pestilential fevers cover

An Essay on Contagious Diseases / more particularly on the small-pox, measles, putrid, malignant, and pestilential fevers

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About This Book

The essay offers a practitioner-focused explanation of several infectious maladies, defining contagion as airborne or effluvial and distinguishing epidemic from pestilential outbreaks. It advances physiological propositions that infectious particles cause blood corpuscles to aggregate or change shape, forming larger molecules that obstruct small vessels and produce eruptions, inflammations, buboes, mortifications, and other symptoms. Early microscopic observations are invoked to support these mechanisms. The author also surveys climatic and atmospheric conditions thought to favor malignant fevers, compares classical epidemic accounts, and presents demonstrations linking observable phenomena to contemporary natural-philosophical principles.

About the Author

Wintringham, Clifton portrait

Clifton Wintringham

Clifton Wintringham was an author known for his contributions to medical literature in the 19th century. His notable work, "An Essay on Contagious Diseases / more particularly on the small-pox, measles, putrid, malignant, and pestilential fevers," explores the nature and impact of various contagious diseases, reflecting the medical understanding of his time. Wintringham's writing provides insights into the public health challenges faced during an era when infectious diseases were a significant concern. His work remains a point of reference for those studying the history of medicine and epidemiology.

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