WoodA. Dictionary of National BiographyLondon: Smith, Elder & Co; 1900; vol. LXII; 348.
2.
A brief account of the controversy is given in: Berridge V Edwards G. Opium and the people: opiate use and drug control policy in nineteenth-century EnglandLondon: Free Association Press; 1987; 139–40.
3.
WoodA, op. cit. ref. 1, 347–348.
4.
WoodA. A new method of treating neuralgia by the direct application of opiates to the painful parts. Edinburgh Medical & Surgical Journal1855; 82:266–6.
5.
Report of the Scientific committee to investigate the physiological and therapeutical effects of the hypodermic method of injection. Medico-chirurgical transactions of the Royal Medical and Chirurugical Society of London1867; 2nd series; 32:563–6.
6.
Wood A, op. cit. ref. 4, 266.
7.
WoodA. Treatment of neuralgic pains by narcotic injections. BMJ1858;722.
8.
Wood A, op. cit. ref. 4, 267–272.
9.
Ibid., pp.274–7.
10.
WoodA. Treatment of neuralgic pains by narcotic injections. BMJ1858;721.
11.
WoodA. op. cit. ref. 4, 280.
12.
WoodA. op. cit. ref. 7, 722.
13.
Ibid., 722–723.
14.
The London and Provincial Medical Directory. London: John Churchill; 1861;170.
15.
Medical Times and Gazette 1858; II:408–409.
16.
Ibid., 457–458.
17.
Medical Times and Gazette 1859; I:234–235, 310–311, 387–388; Medical Times and Gazette 1859: II:251–254; Hunter C. On the speedy relief of pain and other nervous affections by the hypodermic method. London: John Churchill & Sons;1865.
18.
Medical Times and Gazette 1859; II:354–5.
19.
Hunter C, op. cit. ref. 17, 23–24, 33–36.
20.
Ibid., 18, 57–58. Medical Times and Gazette 1859; I:234, 310–311, 387–388; Medical Times and Gazette 1859; II:251–253.
21.
Op. cit. ref. 17, 36–42.
22.
Medical Times and Gazette 1865; I:640.
23.
Medical Times and Gazette 1865; II:50.
24.
Ibid., pp. 22, 107.
25.
Ibid., p.107.
26.
Op. cit. ref. 5, 583.
27.
AnstieF. The hypodermic injection of remedies. The Practitioner1868; I: 32–41. Op. cit. ref. 2,140–44.