Domestic medicine; or, The family physician: being an attempt to render the medical art more generally useful, by shewing people what is in their own power both with respect to the prevention and cure of diseases. Chiefly calculated to recommend a proper attention to regimen and simple medicines. By William Buchan, M.D. [Four lines in Latin from Cicero]

All titles
  • Domestic medicine; or, The family physician: being an attempt to render the medical art more generally useful, by shewing people what is in their own power both with respect to the prevention and cure of diseases. Chiefly calculated to recommend a proper attention to regimen and simple medicines. By William Buchan, M.D. [Four lines in Latin from Cicero]
  • Domestic medicine
  • Family physician.
People / Organizations
Imprint
Philadelphia: Printed [by John Dunlap] for and sold by R. Aitken, at his book-store, nearly opposite the London-Coffee-House, in Front-Street, [1772?]
Publication year
1772-1772
ESTC No.
W19973
Grub Street ID
329602
Description
vii,[5],368p. ; 8⁰
Note
Aitken used this imprint from 1770 until 1773. The text is typographically identical with the Philadelphia 1772 edition printed by John Dunlap for Aitken, but lacks the added dissertation on the gout by William Cadogan.

Errors in paging: p. 221, 247 misnumbered 121, 147.
Uncontrolled note
Signatures: pi? A-2Z?