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pro vyhledávání: '"Justin Rivest"'
Autor:
Justin Rivest
Publikováno v:
The William and Mary Quarterly. 80:398-402
Autor:
Justin Rivest
Publikováno v:
Early Science and Medicine. 26:509-538
This article explores a set of medications, called les remèdes des pauvres, that were distributed from the late seventeenth century onward to the sick poor of rural France and to French missions abroad. Although it was eventually absorbed into the F
Autor:
Justin Rivest, Hélène Leuwers
Publikováno v:
European Journal for the History of Medicine and Health. 79:172-174
Autor:
Justin Rivest
Publikováno v:
Ambix. 69:89-91
In this book Stefanie Ganger presents a panoramic history of cinchona, the medicinal bark native to the Andean highlands of South America, widely used in the early modern period in drugs against in...
Autor:
Justin Rivest
Publikováno v:
Drugs on the Page
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::f5c73cac26c4d3a59b31c7f3a09a2324
https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvh4zdn2.8
https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvh4zdn2.8
Autor:
Justin Rivest, Alisha Rankin
Publikováno v:
New England Journal of Medicine. 375:106-109
An examination of the use of clinical trials as a tool for the marketing and licensing of drugs in Europe from the 16th through the 18th centuries reveals a surprising history of governmental involvement in the certification of promising therapeutics
Secret Remedies and the Medical Needs of the French State: The Career of Adrien Helvétius, 1662–1727
Autor:
Justin Rivest
This article explores the relation between proprietary drugs and state interests in early modern France by following the career of the medical entrepreneur Adrien Helvetius (1662–1727). Helvetius began as a private practitioner, but his successful
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::da706bc2dce2fc3dda5e7c7d1e8a8ae9
Autor:
Justin Rivest
Publikováno v:
Ambix. 65(3)
This article explores the links between chymical medicine, charity, and vocation in the writings and careers of Henri Rousseau de Montbazon and Nicolas Aignan, known as "the Louvre Capuchins" (les capucins du Louvre) because they operated a royally s