3. Foxe, A. N.The oath of Hippocrates.Psychiat. Quart., 19: 17–25, 1945.
4.
4. Howey, M. O.The Encircled Serpent.New York: Arthur Richmond Co., 1955, pp. 89–90.
5.
5. Levine, M.The Hippocratic oath in modern dress.J. Assn. Amer. Med. Coll., 23: 317, 1948.
6.
6. Low, B.The psychological compensations of the analyst.Int. J. Psychoanal., 16: 1–8, 1935.
7.
7. Menninger, K. A.Psychological factors in the choice of medicine as a profession.Bull. Menninger Clin., 21: 51–58, 1957.
8.
8. Racker, H.Psychoanalytic technique and the analyst's unconscious masochism.Psychoanal. Quart., 27: 555–562, 1958.
9.
9. Rogoff, N.The decision to study medicine. InThe Student-Physician, ed. by R. K. Merton et al. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1957, pp. 109–129.
10.
10. Sharpe, E. F.The psychoanalyst (1947). InCollected Papers on Psycho-Analysis.London: Hogarth Press, 1950, pp. 109–122.
11.
11. Simmel, E.The doctor game, illness and the profession of medicine.Int. J. Psychoanal, 7: 470–483, 1926.
12.
12. Szasz, T.The experiences of the analyst.This Journal, 4: 197–223, 1956.
13.
13. Wheelis, A.The vocational hazards of psycho-analysis.Int. J. Psychoanal., 37: 171–184, 1956.
14.
14. Zilboorg, G.History of Medical Psychology.New York: Norton, 1941, p. 22.