Gold Cure

Gold Cure
Author: Ted Mathys
Publisher: Coffee House Press
Total Pages: 106
Release: 2020-09-15
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 1566895898

Lustrous, tender, and expansive, Gold Cure moves from boomtown gold mines and the mythical city of El Dorado to the fracking wells of the American interior, excavating buried histories, legacies of conquest, and the pursuit of shimmering ideals. Ted Mathys skewers police brutality on the ribs of a nursery rhyme and drives Petrarchan sonnets into shale fields deep under the prairies. In crystalline language rich with allegory and wordplay, Mathys has crafted a moving elegy for the Anthropocene.

The Gold Coast Cure

The Gold Coast Cure
Author: Andrew Larson
Publisher: Hci
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2005
Genre: Health
ISBN: 9780757302350

Presents a five-week program designed to help people lose weight, improve blood pressure and cholesterol levels, heal the immune system, and reverse such ailments as obesity, coronary artery disease, type II diabetes, and osteoarthritis.

Sanitariums, Hospitals, and the Belladonna Cure

Sanitariums, Hospitals, and the Belladonna Cure
Author: Kenneth Anderson
Publisher: The HAMS Harm Reduction Network, Inc.
Total Pages: 565
Release: 2022-11-16
Genre: Medical
ISBN:

This book covers the history of for-profit institutions for the treatment of drug and alcohol habits which were established prior to the Repeal of Prohibition, as well as a number of miscellaneous entities such as mail-order opium cures. These include the famous Charles B. Towns Hospital and its notorious belladonna cure. Although many people know that Alcoholics Anonymous founder Bill Wilson was treated with the belladonna cure at the Charles B. Towns Hospital, few are aware that Towns was an insurance salesman with an eighth grade education and no medical training who lied about inventing an addiction cure that he got from someone else, that Towns had also been a stockbroker who was convicted of grand larceny after embezzling money for his clients, and that Towns only decided to make a buck in the addiction cure business after being banned from stock trading. Furthermore, in the 1910s, Towns proposed that state government should force drug addicts to take his cure against their wills, and that death camps should be built to exterminate anyone who relapsed after taking his cure. This book also tells the story of Harry Hubbell Kane, who founded the De Quincey Home for the cure of drug addicts in 1881. After the De Quincey Home failed in 1883, Kane invented and marketed a notorious patent medicine named Scotch Oats Essence. Scotch Oats Essence was comprised of one third alcohol and each ounce contained about a half a grain of morphine. It seems that Kane had decided that if he couldn't make money by curing drug addicts, he could make a lot of money by creating them. These are only two of hundreds of addiction treatment facilities which existed prior to the founding of AA: some good, some bad, and some indifferent. These stories and many more can be found in this book.

Journal of the American Medical Association

Journal of the American Medical Association
Author: American Medical Association
Publisher:
Total Pages: 744
Release: 1886
Genre: American Medical Association
ISBN:

Includes proceedings of the Association, papers read at the annual sessions, and list of current medical literature.