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1by Morgan, H. B. (Hyacinth Bernard Wenceslaus Morgan), 1885-1956“…It is important that the Labour Movement should in its encouragement of the ideal of international brotherhood have some interest in international medicine, or in the way by which disease from one set of workers in one country may be conveyed either by direct contact or by handling of commodities to the workers of another. …”
Published [1920?]
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2by Morgan, H. B. (Hyacinth Bernard Wenceslaus Morgan), 1885-1956“…Cold storage of the blood to be kept for transfusion is very important, and I am inclined to agree, from my knowledge of the facilities available in the Voluntary Hospitals in the country and at most of the storage centres, that the cold storage of this blood to be subsequently transfused is far from ideal. 3. I am not an authority on refrigeration and refrigerators, but I cannot possibly agree that refrigerators used for ordinary domestic services are suitable for blood storage. …”
Published 3 November 1939
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3by Morgan, H. B. (Hyacinth Bernard Wenceslaus Morgan), 1885-1956“…Cold storage of the blood to be kept for transfusion is very important, and I am inclined to agree, from my knowledge of the facilities available in the Voluntary Hospitals in the country and at most of the storage centres, that the cold storage of this blood to be subsequently transfused is far from ideal. 3. I am not an authority on refrigeration and refrigerators, but I cannot possibly agree that refrigerators used for ordinary domestic services are suitable for blood storage. …”
Published 3 November 1939
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4by Morgan, H. B. (Hyacinth Bernard Wenceslaus Morgan), 1885-1956“…In a previous memorandum, it has been suggested how members of Trade Unions in a special or in particular districts should combine together voluntarily as far as possible, at the request of their Union branch, and go on to the panel of one particular medico who should be chosen because of sympathy in a general way with Labour ideals. The very thought that when anything goes wrong, the whole of the members of the Union or this panel may move en bloc to another practitioner would provide some stimulus to more than ordinary attention of the panel patients. …”
Published [1920?]