Look at section 35: That in all recoveriesunder this act full costs shall be allowed.
Section 35 provides that "In all recoveries under this act full costs shall be allowed.
There are several remarkable recoverieson record, but possibly the most wonderful is the case of J.
Conklin reports a successful case of splenectomy for malarial spleen, and in reviewing the subject he says that the records of the past decade in operations for simple hypertrophy, including malaria, show 20 recoveries and eight deaths.
Even the older writers report many instances of remarkablerecoveries from lung-injuries, despite the primitive and dirty methods of treatment.
Though the proportion of recoveries is at present to that of deaths about one to two or two and a half, it is still a perfectly justifiable operation in many cases of disease and injury.
Thirteen have been collected by Wyeth with four recoveries and nine deaths.
That in eight cases in which perforation of the large intestine was certain, four recoveries took place; but in each instance suppuration occurred.
In the face of the numerous recoveries in such cases, habitual abdominal exploration is not justified, under the conditions usually prevailing in the field.
A number of somewhat sensational immediaterecoveries from serious wounds of the head have been placed upon record.
These cases run on exactly the same lines as those in which the same condition is secondary to spontaneous perforation of the bowel, in which we consider it our duty to operate, and in which a definite percentage of recoveries is obtained.
Another valuable agent to which I attribute a number of recoveries is the application of a moist girdle suggested by Professor Alfred Vogel, of the University of Dorpat, Russia.
Mycotic stomatitis is not a serious disease, and in uncomplicated cases recoveries soon follow the removal of the cause and the application of the indicated remedies.
Recoveries are rare in spite of careful attention.
In these cases, the less food given the quicker the recoveries and the fewer the fatalities.
Salisbury fed his patients on nothing but meat and water, and the percentage ofrecoveries in chronic diseases was considered remarkable.
In the Surgical History of the Crimean Campaign this fact is shown in the results of amputation; but the distinction is not made in regard to the recoveries without amputation.
Eight cases of union after compound gunshot fractures of the femur in these situations have, however, returned from the late mutiny in India; and this is a much larger proportion than was that of the recoveries from the Crimea.
The proportion of recoveries in amputations in the upper third of the femur in the Crimean war was under 13 per cent.
Ballingall made the calculation that one in seventy–nine is the average number of tetanic cases among wounded, and states that the proportion of recoveries is so small as scarcely to be taken into account.
Many recoveries can be obtained with careful treatment.
Veterinarians report recoveries in from fifty to sixty per cent of the cases treated.
In recent cases the recoveries amount to the proportion of 75 to 90 per cent.
Such are the conditions favourable to a high rate of recoveries enforced by rule.
The proportion of recoveries above stated, is calculated upon cases of less than a year's duration.
Ripping, from its opening to its close; and I find that the recoveries during the first twenty-five years amounted to forty-two per cent.
Take a single asylum, like Hanwell, and compare the recoveries of a later with an earlier period.
The explanation offered by the Commissioners is that there is a greater proportion of recoveries and deaths taking place among the patients of the rural district.
I would add that in the United States, where reasons have been assigned why the statistics of asylums exhibit apparently fewer recoveries in the later than the earlier period of the last forty years, Dr.
It then appears that during two previous periods the recoverieswere higher than 28.
Mortality of Albatrosses A recent analysis of recoveries of Laysan albatrosses (Diomedea immutabilis) and black-footed albatrosses (D.
Against ligature, statistics have been quoted to show that in a series of cases in which the jugular vein has not been tied the percentage of recoveries is just as high as in those in which it had been ligatured.
If such cases could be operated on in the earliest stage whilst the infective thrombus was still limited, without doubt a higher percentage of recoveries would be obtained.
Many of the recoveries will, however, under the most active and early treatment, be but partial, and in all cases the animals become predisposed to subsequent attacks.
In the late and tardyrecoveries a partial paralysis of the hind limbs may last for months.
These sudden attacks and quick recoveries point to the nature of the trouble.
In the more severe, in which there is complete loss of power of movement, recoveries are rare.
The others, cases of amputation below the knee, made most favourable recoveries after ligature of the superficial femoral, and in more than one the stump healed very rapidly after its readjustment.
I need scarcely remind the English lawyer that this expedient suggested itself to our forefathers, and produced those famous Fines and Recoveries which did so much to undo the harshest trammels of the feudal land-law.
It bore in fact exactly the same relation to the Testament, which the deed leading the uses bore to the Fines and Recoveries of old English law, or which the charter of feoffment bore to the feoffment itself.
The other two were making such excellent recoveries nothing was needed.
Fines are so generally associated in legal phraseology with recoveries that it may not be inconvenient to describe the latter in the present place.
Fines, along with the kindred fiction of recoveries, were abolished by the Fines and Recoveries Act 1833, which substituted a deed enrolled in the court of chancery.
In like manner, too, the good and skilful parson comes by experience to know the signs and stages of the moral ailments and recoveries which some of them know how so tenderly and so wisely to care for.
Marvellous recoveries often astonish the physician, and he cannot account for them except by supposing that in some way the powers of the mind have been roused to interfere with the working of the nervous system.
Some men of note have attributed therecoveries claimed for homoeopathy to this cause.
Apparent recoveries do very occasionally occur, though this is denied by the majority of alienists.
Excited melancholia is a disease characterized by repeated relapses, and recoveries are rare in cases above the age of forty.
During the past year, for example, the recoveriesreached 46.
It may be reasonably assumed that a goodly number of recoveries ascribed to drug treatments are due, in reality, to the resisting force of a good constitution, or to obedience to the laws of health given in the circular.
The recoveries were best where the treatment was simplest, such as external warmth with plenty of diluents.
The statistics of death and recoveries are certainly as good as can be produced by any hospital in the world, dealing with the same class of cases.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "recoveries" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.