RothmanSM. Living in the Shadow of Death, Tuberculosis and the Social Experience of Illness in American History, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995. Ott K. Fevered 1Lives, Tuberculosis in American Culture since 1870, Harvard University Press, 1996
2.
ShawGB. The Doctor's Dilemma, Penguin Books, 1946: Preface on Doctors; 8.
3.
Ibid., p.69. The preface, written in 1911, continues: ‘Doctors, if not better than other men, are certainly no worse. I was reproached during the performance of the Doctor's Dilemma at the Court Theatre in 1907 because I made the artist a rascal, the journalist an illiterate incapable, and all the doctors ‘angels’. But I did not go beyond the warrant of my own experience.’
4.
CushingH.The Life of Sir William Osier, (for an example of Osier's oratory when he berated Baltimore's mayor): Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1925: vol. 1; 570.
5.
PhilipRW. Collected Papers on Tuberculosis, Oxford University Press, 1937: 419.
6.
LeitchAG. Two Men and a Bug: One Hundred Years of Tuberculosis in Edinburgh. Proc R Coll Physicians Edinb1996; 26: 295–308.
7.
RobertsonE.Glasgow's Doctor, James Burn Russell, MOH, 1837–1904, East Linton: Tuckwell; 1998: 3.
8.
BryderL.Below the Magic Mountain, a Social History of Tuberculosis in Twentieth-Century Britain, Oxford: Clarendon Press;1988: 145–148.
9.
ClaysonC.Tuberculosis. In: McLachlan G. Improving the Common Weal, Aspects of Scottish Health Services 1900–1984, Edinburgh: Nuffield Provincial Hospitals Trust; 1987: 388
10.
DormandyTL. The White Death, A History of Tuberculosis, London: Hambledon, 1999; note on p. 132.
11.
SmithFB. The Retreat of Tuberculosis, 1850–1950. Beckenham, Kent: Croom Helm, 1988; 167–211.
12.
As late as 1931 the Ministry of Health estimated that over 1000 children a year were dying of bovine tuberculosis in England and Wales. See Bryder, op. cit., ref. 8, 133.
13.
CathcartEP. Committee on Scottish Health Services Report, Edinburgh: HMSO, 1936; 381 Cathcart noted an overall fall in the death rate from tuberculosis from 1911 to 1931 but it remained the commonest cause of death by far in young people. The annual death toll in the early 1930s was 444 children under five, and 1238 aged between five and 25, a significant proportion of which was due to bovine infection.
14.
Philipop. cit., ref. 5, p. 336. Even more uncannily, Philip had prophesied in 1910 that ‘…the practical disappearance of tuberculosis might be expected by 1950–55.’