BIBLIOGRAPHY 



This bibliography is added as a help to the student of the subject, 

 but has no claim to completeness. For additional literature, see the 

 bibliography in Bulletin 34 of the Bureau of American Ethnology. 

 Minor notes on ''scrofula" or "consumption" are scattered through 

 the reports of many travelers, missionaries, and other early writers 

 which deal with the Indians. 



Andrew, J. - The Lumleian lectures on the aetiology of phthisis. Brit. Med. Jour., 

 April, 1884, 655-59. 

 In 1881-82 consumption was prevalent among the Indians along the northern 

 shore of Hudson bay. 



Blaschke, E. Topographia medica portus Novi-Archangelscensis. Petropoli, 1842, 

 62, 66-69. 

 Reports consumption and scrofula to be common among the natives of the region. 

 BoucHARDAT, M. L'Aun. de therap., Par., 1861, 71. 



Gives a note on tuberculosis among the Hudson Bay Eskimo. 

 Brewer, I. W. Tuberculosis among the Indians of Arizona and New Mexico. 

 N. Y. Med. Jour., 1906, lxxxiv, 981-83. 

 Gives school and reservation physicians' reports on tuberculosis among the 

 Indians in Arizona and New Mexico. 



Bull, H. R. Tuberculosis among the Indians, Trans. Colo. Med. Soc, Denver, 

 1894, 314-21. 

 Reports on cases of tuberculosis under his observation during five years at the 

 Grand Junction school for the Indians. 



CoiNDET, L. Hygiene des altitudes du Mexique. Mem. de med. milit., 1869, 

 XXII, 209. 

 Reports that subsequent to the siege of Puebla, Mexico, phthisis prevailed among 

 the Indian and Creole captives after they were brought to Orizaba. 

 Farnham's travels in the great western prairies, etc., 1839, in Early Western Travels, 

 Thwaite's ed., xxviii, 159. 

 Speaking of the "Chippeways," the writer says: "They have conjurers who cure 

 diseases — as rheumatism, flux, and consumption." 



Fox, Carroll. Tuberculosis among the Indians of southeastern Alaska. Public 

 Health Reports, Marine Hos. Ser., xvi, pt. ii, 1615-16, 1901, Washington, 1902. 

 Comments on the prevalence of all forms of tuberculosis among the natives of south- 

 eastern Alaska; no statistics. 



Glisan, R. Climate and diseases of Oregon. Amer. Jour. Med. Sci., 1865, 73-82. 



Page 79: "At the close of the Rogue river war the scattered remnants of all the 

 tribes of Indians in Oregon, west of the Cascade mountains, were moved on a reserva- 

 tion lying between the Willamette valley and the Pacific ocean, the total number 

 being about 5,000 souls." . . . "Here they enjoyed moderate health for a short period 

 only. Diarrhoea, dysentery, pneumonia, consumption, and scrofula, in all its varie- 

 ties, soon became prevalent, and carried them off in large numbers." 



The article contains no statistics or history. 



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