Hygiene of the Nursery1898 - 293 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 33
Page 21
... usually assumes a natural shape in time . The same is true of less noticeable depressions , prominences and irregularities . But it should be remembered that restoration to symmetry must be left entirely to nature , as any attempt to ...
... usually assumes a natural shape in time . The same is true of less noticeable depressions , prominences and irregularities . But it should be remembered that restoration to symmetry must be left entirely to nature , as any attempt to ...
Page 23
... usually due to an accumulation of gas in the intestines , and indicates disease of this portion of the digestive tract ; marked depression , on the other hand , is encountered in serious brain affections , in cholera infantum ...
... usually due to an accumulation of gas in the intestines , and indicates disease of this portion of the digestive tract ; marked depression , on the other hand , is encountered in serious brain affections , in cholera infantum ...
Page 29
... usually very rapid , and the well - known ' shooting up ' of boys and girls takes place , the whole person growing , but the lower part in par- ticular . Similar changes of location will be noticed by following the quarter - lines , but ...
... usually very rapid , and the well - known ' shooting up ' of boys and girls takes place , the whole person growing , but the lower part in par- ticular . Similar changes of location will be noticed by following the quarter - lines , but ...
Page 33
... usually due to earache or hunger ; it frequently , too , is caused by the constant pricking of a badly - adjusted safety pin or other mechanical irritant . If crying occur during an attack of coughing it is an indication of some painful ...
... usually due to earache or hunger ; it frequently , too , is caused by the constant pricking of a badly - adjusted safety pin or other mechanical irritant . If crying occur during an attack of coughing it is an indication of some painful ...
Page 37
... usually met with when too strong food has been administered . Here the increased hunger is due to the fact that the food administered , while it may be very rich in nutritive properties , is ill - adapted to the delicate digestive power ...
... usually met with when too strong food has been administered . Here the increased hunger is due to the fact that the food administered , while it may be very rich in nutritive properties , is ill - adapted to the delicate digestive power ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abdomen allowed arrowroot baby Barley water bath beef BEEF TEA blood body boiling bottle bowels bread breast breast milk broth caseine catarrh chest child clean clothing cold water constipation cool cream diet digestion disease dressing effleurage Examples of Variations fæces feeding feet fever flannel fluid fluidounces fontanelle frequently gently half a pint hand head healthy heat hot water human milk inches increase infant intestinal keep latter legs lime water massage meal Milk sugar minutes mixture month mother mouth movements muscles muslin napkin night nipple nurse nursery nutrition ounces pain pancreatin pepsin peptonization piece poultice powder preparation proper quantity readily rectum rickets rubbing salt saucepan scarlet fever skin sleep soap soft sponge stirring stomach sucking sufficient surface tablespoonfuls tapotement teaspoonful teeth temperature tion towel urine vaseline warm wash week
Popular passages
Page 7 - Edited by Louis Starr, MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children in the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania; Physician to the Children's Hospital, Philadelphia.
Page 6 - STARR. The Digestive Organs in Childhood. The Diseases of the Digestive Organs in Infancy and Childhood. With Chapters on the Investigation of Disease and the Management of Children, 2d Edition, Enlarged.
Page 209 - The cows were milked at the unusual and abnormal hours of midnight and noon, and the noon's milking— that which alone was followed by illness— was placed, while hot, in the cans, and then, without any attempt at cooling, carted eight miles during the warmest part of the day in a very hot month.
Page 206 - Cows must not be allowed to drink stagnant water ; but must have free access to pure, fresh water. 4. Cows must not be heated or worried before being milked. 5. The pasture must be free from noxious weeds, and the barn and yard must be kept clean. 6. The udders should be washed, if at all dirty, before the milking.
Page 7 - The Hygiene of the Nursery. Including the General Regimen and Feeding of Infants and Children, and the Domestic Management of the Ordinary Emergencies of Early Life, Massage, etc.
Page 183 - For each portion ; to be given every two hours ; amounting to thirty fluidounces per diem. Diet from the beginning of the third month to the sixth month : — Milk 5 tablespoonfuls. Cream I tablespoonful.
Page 223 - ... and tie a piece of cloth over the top. Place the jar in a pot half full of boiling water, and keep the pot on the fire for four hours, simmering.
Page 120 - One cannot too soon begin to form the good habit of regularity in sleeping hours, and so far as circumstances will admit, the following rules may be enforced: — From birth to the end of the sixth or eighth month, the infant must sleep from...
Page 184 - ... hard and dry, it having been baked by the long-continued heat. This hard mass may be used for infant feeding in the latter part of the first year, but it should not be given more than twice a day. The flour ball is grated fine, and it may then be prepared, according to Starr's rule, as follows: " Rub one teaspoonful of the powder with a tablespoonful of milk into a smooth paste, then add a second tablespoonful of milk, constantly rubbing until a cream-like mixture is obtained. Pour this into...
Page 207 - ... ice water, the water being of the same depth as the milk in the can. It would be well if the water in the tank could be kept flowing, indeed this will be necessary unless ice water is nsed.