Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Medical Responsibility in the Choice of Anaesthetics: With a Table of the Anaesthetic Employed, Its Mode of Administration and Results, in Nearly Fifty Large Hospitals in the United Kingdom
Now if the patient be warned that the ether will choke him, and told that when this occurs, to take long breaths to relieve it, and not to struggle and endeavour to push away the sponge, many will go to sleep quietly, and without trouble to them selves or the surgeon. I have but one other point to speak of, in reference to giving ether, when the patient, either old or young, struggles, and asks for a respite, and fresh air, do not yield. Hold him down by mam force, if necessary, and at any rate keep the sponge tight over the mouth and nose, till he finally takes long breaths and then goes ofif into ether sleep. Doing this prevents him remembering anything about his struggles, It is absurd to stop the ether and try to reason with adults excited by the anaesthetic, and cruel not to push on quickly with children. This may seem puerile to my American brethren, but my personal experience tells me that those who use chloroform, may'somehow have a dread of ether, as if it was to be suddenly fatal, and hence fail to give a patient enough to intoxicate him quickly. This arises from lack of familiarity with its use and administration.
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