Oxford Dictionary of Medical Quotations

(WallPaper) #1
Sir Christopher Andrews –

Director, World Influenza Centre, London


Influenza is something unique. It behaves
epidemiologically in a way different from that of
any other known infection.
Foreword to Influenza: The Last Great Plague, W.I.B.
Beveridge. Heinemann, London ()


Professor ‘Tommy’ Annandale

–

Professor of Surgery, Edinburgh


They say it doesn’t matter how long one washes
one’s hands, because there will still be organisms
in the sweat glands and hair follicles, so I rub my
hands with Vaseline.
Harley Streetp. , Reginald Pound. Michael Joseph,
London ()


Anonymous

An adult is one who has ceased to grow vertically
but not horizontally.


A consultant is a man sent in after the battle to
bayonet the wounded.
Penguin Dictionary of Modern Humorous Quotationsp. ,
Fred Metcalf. Penguin Books, London ()


A doctor who cannot take a good history and a
patient who cannot give one are in danger of
giving and receiving bad treatment.
Clues in the Diagnosis and Treatment of Heart Diseases
Introduction, Paul Dudley White


An epidemiologist is a doctor broken down by age
and sex.


A faithful friend is the medicine of life.


A fool lives as long as his destiny allows him.
The Sunday TimesJuly , as a phrase of the suicide
Svetozar Milosˇovic ́, father of Slobodan Milosˇovic ́, President
of Serbia on trial for war crimes


A man’s liver is his carburettor.


An observant parent’s evidence may be disproved
but should never be ignored.
Lancet: ()


A minor operation: one performed on
somebody else.
Penguin Dictionary of Modern Humorous Quotationsp. ,
Fred Metcalf. Penguin Books, London ()


A physician is someone who knows
everything and does nothing.
A surgeon is someone who does
everything and knows nothing.
A psychiatrist is someone who knows
nothing and does nothing.
A pathologist is someone who knows
everything and does everything too late.


A surgeon should give as little pain as possible
while he is treating the patient, and no pain at all
when he charges his fee.
‘FRCS’ in The Times, quoted by Reginald Pound in Harley
Street. Michael Joseph, London ()


Abstinence is a good thing, but it should always be
practised in moderation.

A rash of dermatologists, a hive of allergists, a
scrub of interns, a giggle of nurses, a flood of
urologists, a pile of proctologists, an eyeful of
ophthalmologists, a whiff of anesthesiologists, a
cast of orthopaedic rheumatologists, a gargle of
laryngologists.

Asthma is a disease that has practically the same
symptoms as passion except that with asthma it
lasts longer.
Journal of the American Medical Association: ()

By the year 2000 the commonest killers such as
coronary heart disease, stroke, respiratory,
diseases and many cancers will be wiped out.
Irish TimesApril ()

Children are one third of our population and all
our future.
US Select Panel for Promotion of Child Health()

Choose your specialist and you choose your
disease.
The Westminster ReviewMay ()

Coughs and sneezes spread diseases.
British wartime slogan ()

Dermatology is the best specialty. The patient
never—dies and never gets well.
Medical Quotes, J. Dantith and A. Isaacs. Market House
Books, Oxford ()

Dr Bell fell down the well
And broke his collar bone
Doctors should attend the sick
And leave the well alone

Doctor says he would be a very sick man if were
still alive today.

Even a good operation done poorly is still a poor
operation.

Everyone faces at all times two fateful possibilities:
one is to grow older, the other not.

Exploratory operation: a remunerative
reconnaissance.

Fifty years ago the successful doctor was said to
need three things; a top hat to give him Authority,
a paunch to give him Dignity, and piles to give him
an Anxious Expression.
Lancet: ()

Get up at five, have lunch at nine,
Supper at five, retire at nine,
And you will live to ninety-nine.

   ·


Continued
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