De morbis puerorum, or, a treatise of the diseases of children;: with their causes, signs, prognosticks, and cures, for the benefit of such as do not understand the Latine tongue, and very useful for all such as are house-keepers, and have children. With the contents of the several chapters, as also an alphabetical table of all the diseases mentioned herein. By Robert Pemell practitioner in physick, at Cranebrooke in Kent. May the 29. 1653.

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Title
De morbis puerorum, or, a treatise of the diseases of children;: with their causes, signs, prognosticks, and cures, for the benefit of such as do not understand the Latine tongue, and very useful for all such as are house-keepers, and have children. With the contents of the several chapters, as also an alphabetical table of all the diseases mentioned herein. By Robert Pemell practitioner in physick, at Cranebrooke in Kent. May the 29. 1653.
Author
Pemell, Robert.
Publication
London :: Printed by J. Legatt, for Philemon Stephens, at the guilded Lion in Pauls Church-yard,
1653.
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Subject terms
Medicine
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A90381.0001.001
Cite this Item
"De morbis puerorum, or, a treatise of the diseases of children;: with their causes, signs, prognosticks, and cures, for the benefit of such as do not understand the Latine tongue, and very useful for all such as are house-keepers, and have children. With the contents of the several chapters, as also an alphabetical table of all the diseases mentioned herein. By Robert Pemell practitioner in physick, at Cranebrooke in Kent. May the 29. 1653." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A90381.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 13, 2024.

Pages

The Prognosticks.

These inflammations and sores being not of any long continu∣ance, (especially in tender and young infants) are easily cured, be∣cause they arise from a light cause and matter: But such as are of long continuance are more hardly cured, and have putrifaction joyned therewith.

Those sores and ulcers of the mouth in children that are black and with crusts or scales, are worst of all, and many times prove mortal.

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