Hill Department of Social Medicine helped inspire and motivate this project.

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The Greatest Advantage to DNQX cancer Mankind: A Healthcare History of Humanity. The Mississippi Valley's Excellent Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1878. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press; 1993. p.113. Dugan J. Doctor Dispachemquic: A story of your Fantastic Southern Plague of 1878. New Orleans: title= 1477-5956-9-49 Clark and Hofeline Print and Publishers; 1879. p. 19. Dugan J. Physician Dispachemquic: A story of the Great Southern Plague of 1878. New Orleans: Clark and Hofeline Print and Publishers; 1879. p. 82. Dugan J. Medical professional Dispachemquic: A story on the Great Southern Plague of 1878. New Orleans: Clark and Hofeline Print and Publishers; 1879. p.Hill Department of Social Medicine helped inspire and motivate this project. From commence to finish, he has pushed me to far better fully grasp the intersection of science and history, its worth, and how words really should be very carefully measured to define its place in academia. reFerences 1. Farley J. Parasites as well as the Germ Theory of Disease. In Rosenberg title= ejhg.2011.98 C, Golden J editors. Framing Illness: Research in Cultural History. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press; 1997. two. Warner M. Public Health within the Old South. In: Numbers RL, Savitt TL, editors. Science and Medicine inside the Old South. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press; 1989. p. 228. three. Duffy, J. Sword of Pestilence: the New Orleans Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1853. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press; 1966. p. 48. 4. Duffy J. Sword of Pestilence: the New Orleans Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1853. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press; 1966. The Everyday Delta, July 26, 1853; p. 46. five. Bloom KJ. The Mississippi Valley's Wonderful Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1878. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press; 1993. pp. 30, 39. 6. Dromgoole JP. Heroes, Honors, and Horrors. Louisville, KY: John P. Morton and Enterprise; 1879. p. 52. 7. Dromgoole JP. Heroes, Honors, and Horrors. Louisville, KY: John P. Morton and Business; 1879. p. 52-53. 8. Rosenberg C. The Cholera Years: The Usa in 1832, 1849 and 1866. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 1962. 9. Dromgoole JP. Heroes, Honors, and Horrors. Louisville, KY: John P. Morton and Organization; 1879. p. 60. ten. Carter AH III. Clowns and jokers can heal us: comedy and medicine. San Francisco: University of California Healthcare Humanities Consortium; 2011. 11. Hinson J. Laughter was God's thought: stories about healing humor. Sylva, NC: Catch the Spirit of Appalachia; 2009. 12. McGuire FA. Therapeutic humor with the elderly. New York: Haworth Press; 1992. 13. Carrigan JA. The Saffron Scourge: A History of Yellow Fever in Louisiana, 1796-1905.14.15.16. 17.18.19.20.21.22.23.24.25.26.Lafayette: The Center for Louisiana Research; 1994. p. 71. A Doctor of New Orleans, History with the Yellow Fever in New Orleans, During the Summer season of 1853 with title= pnas.1110435108 Sketches in the Scenes of Horror which Occurred through the Epidemic. Philadelphia: Kentworthy; 1854. pp. 98-9. Carrigan JA. The Saffron Scourge: A History of Yellow Fever in Louisiana, 1796-1905. Lafayette: The Center for Louisiana Studies; 1994. p. 355. Porter R. The Greatest Benefit to Mankind: A Medical History of Humanity. New York: W.W. Norton Business; 1997. p. 284. Young JH. Device Quackery in America. In: Leavitt JW, Numbers RL, editors.