Cullen

The Consultation Letters of Dr William Cullen (1710-1790) at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh

 

[ID:3048] Case Note / Regarding: Dr Alexander Douglas (Patient) / 30 June 1787 / (Incoming)

Case note describing the case of Dr Douglas, who has been ill since he 'caught a severe Cold by being taken in the rain, & remaining in his wet Cloathes for some hours'.

Facsimile

There are 2 images for this document.

[Page 1]


 

[Page 2]


 
 

Metadata

FieldData
DOC ID 3048
RCPE Catalogue Number CUL/1/2/2081
Main Language English
Document Direction Incoming
Date30 June 1787
Annotation None
TypeAuthorial original
Enclosure(s) No enclosure(s)
Autopsy No
Recipe No
Regimen No
Letter of Introduction No
Case Note No
Summary Case note describing the case of Dr Douglas, who has been ill since he 'caught a severe Cold by being taken in the rain, & remaining in his wet Cloathes for some hours'.
Manuscript Incomplete? No
Evidence of Commercial Posting No

Case

Cases that this document belongs to:

Case ID Description Num Docs
[Case ID:2080]
Case of Dr Alexander Douglas Bart, who caught a bad cold, then strained himself lifting field-stones causing dizziness and a fever.
3


People linked to this document

Person IDRole in documentPerson
[PERS ID:3560]AuthorDr
[PERS ID:1]AddresseeDr William Cullen (Professor Cullen)
[PERS ID:3558]PatientDr Alexander Douglas
[PERS ID:1]Patient's Physician / Surgeon / ApothecaryDr William Cullen (Professor Cullen)
[PERS ID:3560]Patient's Physician / Surgeon / ApothecaryDr

Places linked to this document

Role in document Specific Place Settlements / Areas Region Country Global Region Confidence
Place of Writing Glen Stuart Mid Scotland Scotland Europe certain
Destination of Letter Edinburgh Edinburgh and East Scotland Europe inferred

Normalized Text

Diplomatic Text

XML

XML file not yet available.

Feedback

Send us specfic feeback about this document [DOC ID:3048]

Type
Comments
 

Please note that the Cullen Project team have now disbanded but your comments will be logged in our system and we will look at them one day...