Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The art of massage / by A. Creighton Hale. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. The original may be consulted at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.
172/180 (page 148)
![affords a ready guide to strangers, who wish to be informed of the enormous development of our voluntary system of medical relief. . . . Mr. ]3urdett has produced a work of much labour and forethought, and one which cannot fail to be of gi-eat public utility.—2//« Brif/ish Medical Journal. It is needless to say that it is full of interesting figures.—Th.e Spectator. It is a volume of over 600 pages, crammed with information. ... It now includes general philanthropy in the survey. . . . The entries in the index, each referring to a separate institution, run to nearly three thousand. . . . Mr. Burdett's chapters . . . are of the highest value, practical and suggestive.—Tlte Daily News (leading article). Much new matter and information is included in the present volume, which now forms a thoroughly exhaustive record of the hosj)ital and philanthi'opic work of the year.—The Telegraph. Mr. Burdett's name is a guarantee of good and careful work, and his ' Hospital Year-book' is winning for itself a distinct place among our handy annuals.—The Daily Graphic. . . .A work full of interesting information about London and Provincial hospitals.—The Globe. ... Fully justifies its second title of the 'Year-book of Philanthropy'. . . . The earlier chapters are of special interest, and have been carefully and judiciously compiled by the editor, Mr. Henry C. Burdett. ... A valuable analysis is given of the income and expenditure of the various classes of hospitals, . . . and finally a directory of hospital information of various kinds.—The Scotsman. We reviewed the preceding issue of this work with satisfaction, and we find the new edition an advance upon it. The editor has bestowed upon it great labour and pains, and has made it a work of much value. . . . Important additions have been made to the chapter on nursing. . . . The volume contains so much information that we do not think any one who consults it ■will be dis- appointed, whether seeking for statistical, practical, or any other purpose. It deals with all branches of philanthropic work of the most important descriptions. —The Quee7i. ... Glad to speak favourably of so well-arranged and clearly-printed a guide to British and Colonial hospitals, dispensaries, nursing and convalescent institutions, and asylums.—The Daily Chronicle. NOW READY. 5tli THOUSAND. Demy 16mo (suitable for the apron pocket), handsomely bound in terra- cotta cloth boards, 140 pp., price 2s. THE NURSE'S DICTIONARY. Compiled by Honnob Mortex. Honnor Morten has compiled a book for the use of nurses which is hkely to be of service. ' The Nurse's Dictionary ' explains medical terms and abbreviations, besides giving much information regarding everything to be encountered in the ward or sick-room. Brevity and simplicity are the key-notes of this little volume, which is published by the Scientific Press, Limited, 140 Strand.—T/ie Morning Post. Now that the scope of a nurse's education is so widened as to make a certain amount of medical reading imperative, the need of some such explanatory hand- book follows as a matter of course. Miss Morten proposes to fill this gap, and is successful.—The Hospital Gazette.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21690728_0172.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)