Abstract

THE remarkable article in the Lancet on September 24, 1966, by Professor Henry Miller would have attracted more attention initially if it had been entitled "Medicine and Politics" instead of appearing under the rather cryptic title of "Fifty Years after Flexner." For many must have imagined that they would be reading a heavy bacteriologie discourse on how in these fifty years, the bacteria had given way to increasing numbers of elusive viral organisms as the commonest cause of all kinds of infections and other disease. But, fortunately, there are those who either read the Lancet from cover to cover or . . .

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