Penicillin: Introduction: Primary Sources

Primary Sources Bibliography


Abraham, E. P., Chain, E., Fletcher, C. M., et al., "Further Observations on Penicillin," Lancet
(16 August 1941): 177-188.

Anderson, Donald G. and Chester S. Keefer. The Therapeutic Value of Penicillin: A Study of
10,000 Cases. Ann Arbor: J.W. Edwards, 1948.

Brown, Ethan Allan, "Reactions to Penicillin: A Review of the Literature, 1943-1948," Annals
of Allergy 6 (November-December 1948): 723-746.

Carlisle, Norman and Madelyn, "The Truth About 'Wonder Drugs,' " Coronet (November
1949): 70-74.

"Certification of Penicillin and Derivative Drugs," Legislative History of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act and Its Amendments, vol. 7, U.S. Department of Health,
Education, and Welfare: 413-418.

Chain, E., Florey, H. W., Gardner, A. D., et al., "Penicillin as a Chemotherapeutic Agent,"
Lancet (24 August 1940): 226-228.

Clarke, Hans T., John R. Johnson, and Robert Robinson. The Chemistry of Penicillin.
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1949.

Coghill, Robert D. and Roy S. Koch, "Penicillin: a wartime accomplishment," Chemical
Engineering News 23 (1945): 2310-2316.

Cooley, Donald G., "What Good Is Penicillin to You?", Better Homes and Gardens (September
1944): 58, 81.

Criep, Leo H., "Allergy to Penicillin," JAMA 126 (14 October 1944): 429-430.

Davis, Maxine, "Scourge of Mankind," Good Housekeeping (November 1944): 29, 205-207.

"Druggists Advise Caution in Use of Penicillin," JAMA 127 (24 March 1945): 720.

Fleming, Alexander, "On the Antibacterial Action of Cultures of a Penicillium, with Special
Reference to Their Use in the Isolation of B. Influenza," British Journal of Experimental
Pathology 10 (1929): 226-236.

Geiling, E. M. K., "The Sulfa Drugs and Penicillin," Hygeia (August 1944): 580-581, 616.

Keefer, Chester S., "Penicillin: A wartime accomplishment," in Advances in Military Medicine
Made by American Investigation Working Under the Sponsorship of the Committee on
Medical Research, Volume 2, by E.C. Andrus, et al., eds. Boston: Little Brown, 1948:
719-722.

Killeffer, D. H., "Penicillin Poses Production Problems," Scientific American 169 (December
1943): 247-249.

Likely, David Stanley and Morgan Y. Swirsky, "Staphylococcus Aureus Septicemia Treated
with Penicillin, with Report of Drug Side Effects, " JAMA 123 (11 December 1943):
956-958.

Loewe, Leo, et al., "Combined penicillin and heparin therapy of subacute bacterial endocarditis,"
JAMA 124 (1944): 144-149.

Masters, David. Miracle drug, the inner history of penicillin. London: Eyre & Spottiswoode,
1946.

"Mold for Infections," Time (15 September 1941): 55-56.

"Penicillin," Time (8 February 1943): 41.

"Penicillin for Battlefield," Science News Letter (15 January 1944): 37-38.

"Penicillin Comes to City Hospitals," New York Times (11 May 1944): 21.

"Penicillin and Gonorrhea," Science (Supplement) 97 (4 June 1943): 10-12.

"Public vies with army for penicillin, miracle drug that comes from mold," Newsweek (30
August 1943): 68-70.

Raper, Kenneth B., "A decade of antibiotics in America," Mycologia 44 (1952): 1-59.

________, "Research in the Development of Penicillin," in Advances in Military Medicine
Made by American Investigation Working Under the Sponsorship of the Committee on
Medical Research, Volume 2, by E.C. Andrus, et al., eds. Boston: Little Brown, 1948:
723-745.

"Reactions to Penicillin," Consumer Reports (August 1949): 369.

Reid, Roger D., "Some Properties of a Bacterial-Inhibitory Substance Produced by a Mold,"
Journal of Bacteriology 29 (1935): 215-221.

"Rush on Penicillin," Time (30 August 1943): 44-46.

Stafford, Jean, "More Penicillin Coming," Science News Letter (4 December 1943): 362-364.

Stewart, Irvin. Organizing Scientific Research for War. Boston: Little Brown, 1948.

"Why the Army Tells Us More of Our Boys Will Come Home," Newsweek (25 December 1944): 1.