X-ray Radiograph and Medical Reports of a female patient

  • X-ray Radiograph and Medical Reports, 1922-1933
Date:
1922-1933
Reference:
GC/265
  • Archives and manuscripts

About this work

Description

X-ray (extremely faded) and medical reports of a young female patient, mainly by Dr Neville Samuel Finzi (1881-1968), 1922-1933.

Comprising:

  • GC/265/1: Reports on skiagrams and abdomen, chest and pelvis of Dr Wood's patients, and by Dr Finzi, dated 16 Feb and 19 Oct 1922, 1 Apr 1925 and 14 Oct 1926. 1922-1926.
  • GC/265/2: Radiogram of right lateral coccyx of Dr Wood's patient taken by Dr Finzi. 1 April 1925.
  • GC/265/3: Three letters to Dr Wood, two from C Lane-Roberts and one from Mr Elmslie, containing brief reports on examinations of the patient's spine and pelvis and with Lane-Roberts' suggestions of various treatments to ease her condition dated 8, 23 and 24 Feb 1933. Feb 1933.
  • Publication/Creation

    1922-1933

    Physical description

    1 file

    Acquisition note

    These papers were given to the Contemporary Medical Archives Centre in February 2000 by Alison Wood of London W2.

    Biographical note

    Neville Samuel Finzi, MB, MRCS, LRCP, LSA, DRME (Camb), Hon FACR, Hon FFR (1965), was born on 25 Jun 1881, and recieved his medical training at University College London and Hospital. For much of his career he worked at St Bartholomew's Hospital, London, and became Director of the X-Ray Department and late Consulting Radiologist to the Radiotherapy and X-ray Diagnostic departments. He also held posts as Medical Officer to the Electrical Department of the Metropolitan Hospital and to the X-ray Department of the German Hospital. From 1955-1956 he served as Master of the Society of Apothecaries. Finzi published various papers on the treatment of cancer by radium and X-rays and on ionic medication. In 1913 he published 'Radium Therapeutics' (Frowde, London). He died 3 Apr 1968. The medical reports indicate that Dr Finzi also practised privately in Harley Street, London.

    Terms of use

    This item is closed and cannot be accessed. Please see our Access Policy for more details. Closed until 1 January 2034.

    Permanent link

    Identifiers

    Accession number

    • 829