462 A HISTORY OF NATIONAL TUBERCULOSIS ASSOCIATION 



After the Congress he was largely instrumental in bringing to New 

 York the great international exhibit which was visited by 750,000 

 people, and to which undoubtedly may be traced a greatly height- 

 ened interest in the social significance of the disease. 



Dr. Meyer is a member of the following medical organizations: 

 The American Medical Association, New York Academy of 

 Medicine, Medical Society of the State of New York, the Harvey 

 Society, New York County Medical Society, the Alumni of Mount 

 Sinai Hospital. 



The bibliography of Dr. Alfred Meyer follows: 



The city and its consumptive poor: a plea for a municipal sanatorium outside 



of the corporate limits. 

 State care of consumptive poor, with an account of the first state sanatorium. 



Med. Rec., Oct. 28, 1899. 



State care of the consumptive poor. Med. Rec., Jan. 13, 1900. 

 Relationship of fistula in ano to pulmonary tuberculosis. Mount Sinai Hos- 

 pital Rep., no. 2, 1901. 



Municipal sanatoria. Med. Rec., Dec. 14, 1901. 

 Tuberculosis in the tenements. N. Y. Med. Jour., July 4, 1903. 

 History and work of the Bedford Sanitarium. Tr. Nat. Tuberc. Assn., i, 438, 



1905; Med. Rec., July 8, 1905. 

 Complement fixation in pulmonary tuberculosis. Tr. Nat. Tuberc. Assn., 



xii, 219, 1916; also Med. Rec., Aug. 5, 1910. 

 After-care of discharged cases. Med. Rec., Aug. 10, 1912. 

 A case of spontaneous pyopneumothorax complicated by hydro- or pyopneu- 



mopericardium. Tr. Nat. Tuberc. Assn., xi, 193, 1915; also Med. Rec., 



Dec. n, 1915. 

 A case of bilateral spontaneous non-tuberculous pneumothorax. Tr. Nat. 



Tuberc. Assn., xiii, 330, 1917; also N. Y. Med. Jour., June 30, 1917. 

 Influenza in a tuberculosis sanatorium. Med. Rec., April 12, 1919. 

 Intrapleural hypertension for evacuating pus through bronchi in spontaneous 



pyopneumothorax. Tr. Nat. Tuberc. Assn., xvi, 75, 1920; also Jour. 



Am. Med. Assn., July 24, 1920. 



