EXPOSITION AS APPLIED TO MEDICINE
A GLANCE AT THE ETHICS OF IT
- Richard M. Hewitt, M.D.
Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text.
Excerpt
Physicians are under obligation to teach, and teaching is done largely by means of the printed page. When I chose medical editing as my full-time contribution to that educational effort, I entered an occupation that W. Albert Noyes Jr. recently said is a way to lose old friends and to make no new ones. True enough, an editor is paid to find fault. The faultfinding here, however, will be broadly based. First in work on The Journal of this association, and later in war work supported by my present organization, I read thousands of manuscripts that originated in places situated throughout the United States. I aim, then, at no person, at no group, but at certain writing practices that, springing from innocent motives, finally have beset members of the medical profession.
TO REFRAIN FROM PUBLICATION We of that profession are beset most of all by the great volume of material
Footnotes
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Read before the Section on Anesthesiology at the 103rd Annual Meeting of the American Medical Association, San Francisco, June 22, 1954.
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The Mayo Foundation is a part of the University of Minnesota.








