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Examine a previously unexplored aspect of Civil War military
medicine! Here is the first comprehensive examination of
pharmaceutical practice and drug provision during the Civil War.
While numerous books have recounted the history of medicine in the
Civil War, little has been said about the drugs that were used, the
people who provided and prepared them, and how they were supplied.
This is the first book to provide detailed discussion of the role
of pharmacy. Among the topics covered in this essential volume are
the duties of medical purveyors, the role of the hospital steward,
and the nature and state of medical substances commonly used in the
1860s. This last subject would become a matter of considerable
controversy and ultimately cost William Hammond, the brilliant and
innovative Surgeon General, his career in the Union Army. This
richly detailed book shows why the South found drug provision
especially difficult and describes the valiant efforts of
Confederate sympathizers to run the Union blockade in order to
smuggle in their precious cargoes. You'll also learn about the
scurrilous privateers who were out to make a personal fortune at
the expense of both the Union and the Confederacy. In addition,
Civil War Pharmacy illuminates the systematic effort of
pharmacists, physicians, and botanists to derive from Southern
plants adequate substitutes for foreign substances that were
difficult, if not impossible, to obtain in the Confederacy. In this
painstakingly researched yet highly readable book, Michael A.
Flannery, co-author of the critically acclaimed America's
Botanico-Medical Movements: Vox Populi, examines all these topics
and more. In addition, he assesses the relative successes and
failures of the pharmaceutical aspect of health care at the
timesuccesses and failures that affected every man in army camps
and in the field. Civil War Pharmacy: A History of Drugs, Drug
Supply and Provision, and Therapeutics for the Union and
Confederacy includes photographs, helpful tables and figures, and
six appendices that make hard-to-find information easy to access
and understand. You'll find: the Standard Supply Table of
Indigenous Remedies (1863) Circular No. 6 from the Surgeon
General's Office (May 4, 1863), calling for the removal of calomel
and tartar emetic from the Supply Table instructions on reading and
filling a 19th century prescriptionwith a glossary of Latin phrases
and approximate measures, an excerpt from The Hospital Steward's
Manual, and more! a circular from the Confederate Medical
Purveyor's Office a Materia Medica for the South: A list of
medicinal substances from Porcher's Resources of the Southern
Fields and Forests common prescriptions of the Civil War period as
well as basic syrups of the era with monographs on their principal
substances: alcohol, cinchona, hydrargyrum (mercury), opium, and
quinine Packed with more information than can be listed here and,
just as importantly, presented in a reader-friendly manner, this is
a book that no one interested in Civil War historyor pharmacy
historyshould be without!
"A key achievement of this intriguing book is in capturing the
shifting and diverse nature of homeopathy itself, which Haller
depicts as having developed from an empirical science to a
religious belief system. Haller encompasses the complexity of the
development of homeopathy within a cogent narrative." -Bulletin of
the History of Medicine "John Haller, an eminent historian of
alternative medicine, has written a unique and finely woven account
on homeopathy and the transformations that have characterized its
long history. In this volume, he focuses on its evolving status
from a medical practitioner based system of treatment to one now
largely embraced by segments of the public in search of alternative
therapies. Well-organized and bearing the imprint of a master
historian, it is a pleasure to read." -Pascal James Imperato,
School of Public Health, State University of New York, Downstate
"Haller takes readers on a historical journey involving American
homeopathy as it traversed the political, professional, scientific,
and cultural landscape from the late 19th century to the beginning
of the 21st century. Experts and novices to American homeopathy
will find this book to be comprehensive, objective, informative,
and engaging. Recommended." -Choice
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