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Orchids by Wire (May
1950)
Dear Mr. Cahal:
The sincere and hearty congratulations of the entire
Wisconsin chapter go to you for the splendid achievement embodied in first
issue of GP. Publication outstanding and a tribute to your tireless
efforts.
WILLIAM B. HILDEBRAND Secretary Wisconsin Academy of Family Practice
Orchids from an
Artist
Dear Mr. Cahal:
We received your Pre-Publication issue of GP
and it makes a very fine impression. We wouldn't be surprised if there is a
sudden rash of revamping other magazines in the field because they're being put
to shame.
Generally we feel you and everyone working on the book
are to be congratulated in standing the medical publishing field on its ear.
GP has all the modern cleanliness and crispness of a physician's
brand-new examining room.
If there is anything we can do to help you keep the
start you have, we'd certainly like the opportunity.
ROBERT BALCH Advertising Design Chicago, IL
Sample Orchids (June
1950)
Dear Mr. Cahal:
I wish to acknowledge arrival of the new journalistic
infant, GP, at our office and to announce that it has met with universal
approval. It is beautifully done, Mac, and you and members of the staff can be
excused for feeling puffed up about it, as I presume you are. My sincere best
wishes for continued success.
RAY E. SMITH Executive Secretary Indiana State Medical Association
Indianapolis, IN
Dear Mr. Cahal:
This will acknowledge your letter of April 3,
concerning, the developments of the Journal of the American Academy of General
Practice. I also received the first issue, and I had an opportunity to look
through it.
I am sure that there can be no doubt that this is an
almost phenomenal development. The Journal itself is extremely well organized
and has much of interest in it. Everyone who sees it, I am sure, will be
greatly impressed by its format and general structure. I was delighted to hear
that Doctor Alvarez has accepted the editorship of the Journal. That will give
assurance of maintaining the high standard that has already been set for the
new journal.
ERNEST L. STEBBINS, M.D. Director, The Johns Hopkins University School of
Hygiene and Public Health Baltimore, MD
Dear Mr. Cahal:
GP is uncommonly good looking and good reading.
The one thing it doesn't offer much of is: room for improvement.
Heartiest congratulations!
WILLIAM ALAN RICHARDSON Editor, Medical Economics Rutherford, NJ
Dear Mr. Cahal:
Let me extend my heartiest congratulations to the
Academy on the birth of GP. Certainly this journal marks a milestone in
the continuing vigorous growth of an organization which has enormous potential
for improving the character of medical practice in America. The past two years
make it clear that this potential is rapidly being converted into actual
progress along a road which will inevitably lead to more and better medical
care for our citizens.
The fact that you have not been seemingly bound by
tradition in either format or construction of this journal is certainly
refreshing. Particularly do I like the idea of using scientific articles
specifically written for this journal. The only positive suggestion I might
make is that, again flying in the teeth of tradition, more illustrations, both
drawings and photographs, be used. As you know, I have long felt that we have
hardly scratched the surface for the use of visual aids in teaching, and very
often a well thought out drawing or series of photographs will represent a
thought more effectively than any number of words.
Again, heartiest congratulations and best wishes on
the appearance of this journal, the product of so much in the way of blood,
sweat, and tears.
FRANKLIN D. MURPHY, M.D. Dean, University of Kansas School of Medicine Kansas
City, KS
Dear Mr. Cahal:
This is just a note to congratulate you on Volume I,
No. I of GP. Typographically it is a beautiful job and editorially my
guess is that you are successfully tapping an interest that has long been
neglected. The best of luck in your venture.
JOHN M. STORM Editor, Hospitals Chicago, IL
Dear Mr. Cahal:
Volume I, Number I of GP arrived in the morning
mail, and it was a pleasure to behold. The word "beautiful" scarcely does it
justice. It is without a doubt the finest looking medical journal in the world,
and, I dare say, will stand very high on any list of top quality publications
anywhere.
It is beautifully and interestingly arranged. Articles
and editorials are tops.
The American Academy of General Practice has a great
future ahead of it. It is indeed a pleasure and an honor to be an advertiser in
GP.
Congratulations on your splendid job. All of us here
at Mead Johnson & Company wish you the best of success in the months and
years to come.
LAMBERT D. JOHNSON, JR. Advertising Manager Mead Johnson & Company
Evansville, IN
Kudos (July
1950)
Dear Mr. Cahal:
For some time it has been my desire to express my
appreciation for the first and now the second number of GP.
Your Journal of the American Academy of General
Practice is a triumphant publication. The exceptionally fine quality of paper
and print affords easy and delightful reading and the arrangement of contents
and attractive appearance of the entire journal make it a gem to behold. Not
least of all by any means are the well-known names of those who have
contributed articles to the first two issues.
I could not postpone any longer my wish to write and
congratulate you on your marvelous achievement. The tremendous piece of work
that you have accomplished should insure an unusually remarkable success for
GP.
ARCHIBALD L. HOYNE, M.D. Chicago, IL
Dear Mr. Cahal:
The Nevada Chapter of the American Academy of General
Practice wishes to take this opportunity to extend its congratulations on the
very excellent first issue of the GP. We take great pride in GP
as our official publication.
We also wish to congratulate you on the appointment of
Doctor Alvarez as Editor-in-Chief of GP. We feel that he is certain to
discharge his duties in a commendable manner and will continue to make
GP as excellent as the first issue has proven to be.
WILLIAM E. PASUTTI, M.D. Secretary-Treasurer Nevada Academy of General
Practice Reno, NV
Dear Mr. Cahal:
As Editor of the Journal of the Kentucky State
Medical Association, and on behalf of our staff, we want to express our
hearty congratulations to you, Walter C. Alvarez, M.D., and the American
Academy of General Practice on issuing the journal GP.
It has freshness, depth, originality, and its
typography is excellent. It is, in short, a "finished" work.
The Academy should take great pride in its new
publication.
BRUCE UNDERWOOD, M.D. Secretary and General Manager Kentucky State Medical
Association Louisville, KY
Dear Mr. Cahal:
The word terrific is being overused these days,
I know, but I cannot think of any better word to describe Volume 1, Number 1,
of GP. Many thanks for your kindness in mailing me a copy of the first
issue which impressed me as being a daring trailblazer in medical
literature.
The only trouble GP may get you into, as I see
it, is that it may antagonize Life, Saturday Evening Post, and other
popular magazines raising the cry of unfair competition. Typographically,
literally, and graphically it achieves a pinnacle that should make it must
reading by all physicians, not only general practitioners.
With best wishes for GP's long and successful
life, I remain,
GERALD G. GROSS, EDITOR Washington Report on the Medical Sciences Hibbs
Building Washington, DC
By August, the hubbub
surrounding the new publication had died down a bit, and "Yours Truly" became a
vehicle for meaningful exchange.
Specialization Isn't
the Answer (August 1950)
Chairman, Publication Committee
Dear Sir:
Recently the dean of a midwestern medical school
stated that the great majority of his senior medical students planned to go
into some specialty and that they planned to do so because of their fear of
socialized medicine. No doubt other factors influenced them in making their
decisions.
They have lived in an environment of full-time
teachers and specialists. They learn that in the hospitals the specialists play
the dominant role and they learn of the expanded residency training program
which leads them to believe that there is a great demand for specialists. No
doubt the war contributed its part to this trend toward
over-specialization.
As a result of environment, a lack of practical
counsel and immature thinking on their part, these young men have come to
believe that it is essential that they go into some limited field of
medicine.
We who are experienced know that our system of
medicine cannot support this over-supply of specialists, that many of these
young men are due to be disappointed, and that if this trend continues our
system will become much more vulnerable to the social planners.
We can understand the increasing demand for specialty
training but it is hard to understand the all-out effort on the part of
training hospitals and private hospitals to furnish this training. We feel that
there are neither adequate facilities nor an adequate number of competent
teachers to train properly all these young men who now believe they are
receiving specialty training.
We believe our system of medicine as it stands has
accomplished too much and that it works too well for both the public and the
profession to have it jeopardized by this impractical trend.
We members of the Academy can do much to combat this
trend. Members should seek appointments on the faculties of medical schools. We
should lend support to our Hospital Committee and urge the establishment and
operation of a department of general practice in those hospitals having
residency training programs.
By their contacts the medical students and interns
will learn that the men who do general practice are also highly trained and
respected men.
We could point out to students and interns that in
many instances it would be wiser to start in general practice. After a time
they would be in a much better position to make a decision as to their future
course. Some will wish to take adequate training and go into a specialty.
Others will be happy to remain in general practice and arrange their
postgraduate studies to fit their needs and desires.
Our Committee on Education is sponsoring an extensive
postgraduate training program and a great variety of courses are available.
MAURICE E. KAHLER, M.D. President, Indiana Academy of General Practice
Indianapolis, IN
A Specialist Speaks
(November 1950)
Dear Doctor Boyd:
I read your address on "The Hospital in Relation to
General and Specialty Practice" as it appeared in the September issue of
GP. It was my intention to attend the meeting of the Los Angeles County
Medical Association, but another important appointment came just before going
to the San Francisco meetings.
I think you stated very clearly the position of the
general practitioner in his relationship to the hospital. While I have been a
specialist for fifty years, I see very clearly that the general practitioner
must be the soul and center of the practice of medicine. Specialization has
grown so rapidly that it has almost overwhelmed the profession as a whole. I
liked medicine when we had our County Medical Society meetings attended by
members who practice all branches of medicine. It did not hurt the specialist
to hear the problems of the general practitioner, and it was valuable to the
general practitioner to hear papers and discussions by specialists.
The part that specialization has assumed in recent
years is not altogether a happy one. My belief is that the proper position of
the specialist is that of consultant, and that the general practitioner should
be free to call him without fear that he is going to lose his patient.
There is no doubt that the general practitioner is the
one who comes closest to the people and who should be given the facilities with
which to practice the best medicine possible. This he cannot do unless he has
access to laboratories and hospitals.
I congratulate you on the good sense of your
article.
F.M. POTTENGER, M.D. Monrovia, CA
By the end of the first
year of publication, the first of many clinical pearls started appearing in
"Yours Truly."
Action of Aureomycin
on Vaccinia (December 1950)
Dear Sir:
Here is a bit of information which I thought would be
of interest to the readers of GP.
The day following a smallpox vaccination, a child of 1
year developed severe pneumonitis. Full doses of aureomycin quickly cured the
illness and was given a total of 4 days. The vaccination developed into a
typical primary reaction. This seems to show that aureomycin is of no value
against vaccinia and by extension against smallpox.
H. K. MARCY, M.D. Vice-president, Pennsylvania Academy of General
Practice Malvern, PA |