Practiced in Tucson; registered Jan 28, 1905.
Members of the PCMS 1904-1930
See History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673].
Quebbeman, Frances E. Medicine in territorial Arizona. Phoenix : Arizona Historical Foundation, 1966, pages 264, 370.
Southern California Practitioner, 22(9): September 1907, page 493: Editorial Notes: ... Dr. H.P. Shattuck, of Tucson, Ariz., has been spending a few days in Los Angeles. The doctor will soon open in Tucson the W.S. Whitwell Hospital, which Mrs. Blanche Whitwell has established as a memorial to her late distinguished husband. The institution Dr. Whitwell had in California is most creditable, and Mrs. Whitwell and Dr. Shattuck will perpetuate his work in Arizona.
http://books.google.com/books?id=b9pXAAAAMAAJ
J Am Med Assoc, Jan 1910; LIV: 381: Whitwell Hospital and Sanitarium, Tucson, which was destroyed by fire December 29, last, has been rebuilt and reopened. The new structure is fireproof and is provided with outside villas for the use of patients suffering from asthmatic and pulmonary affections. The hospital was originally built in 1907 by Mrs. W. S. Whitwell, New York City, in memory of Mr. William Scollay Whitwell. The hospital maintains one free bed. Dr. Hobart P. Shattuck is resident physician.
J Am Med Assoc, May 1926; 86: 1472: EPINEPHRINE IN CARDIAC ASTHMA. To the Editor: -- I have a patient with cardiac asthma who is relieved by hypodermic injection of epinephrine. The injections leave ecchymoses or hematomas, however, and these red places remain sore for some time. Is there any treatment? Hobart P. Shattuck, M.D., Los Angeles.
J Am Med Assoc, Dec 1939; 113: 2445: PARTIAL DESTRUCTION OF NAIL BED. To the Editor: -- Because of a trauma, the distal half of the left thumb nail of a man is not adherent to the underlying tissues. He would like it remedied. If the surface of the underlying tissue should be denuded with acid or by mechanical means and a pressure dressing then applied, would the nail and tissue become adherent? Hobart P. Shattuck, M.D., Los Angeles.
J Am Med Assoc, Mar 1943; 121: 782: Hobart Parker Shattuck; Los Angeles ; Cornell University Medical College, New York, 1903; aged 64; died, December 10, in the California Hospital of carcinoma of the stomach.
Members of the PCMS 1904-1930
See History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673].
Quebbeman, Frances E. Medicine in territorial Arizona. Phoenix : Arizona Historical Foundation, 1966, pages 264, 370.
Southern California Practitioner, 22(9): September 1907, page 493: Editorial Notes: ... Dr. H.P. Shattuck, of Tucson, Ariz., has been spending a few days in Los Angeles. The doctor will soon open in Tucson the W.S. Whitwell Hospital, which Mrs. Blanche Whitwell has established as a memorial to her late distinguished husband. The institution Dr. Whitwell had in California is most creditable, and Mrs. Whitwell and Dr. Shattuck will perpetuate his work in Arizona.
http://books.google.com/books?id=b9pXAAAAMAAJ
J Am Med Assoc, Jan 1910; LIV: 381: Whitwell Hospital and Sanitarium, Tucson, which was destroyed by fire December 29, last, has been rebuilt and reopened. The new structure is fireproof and is provided with outside villas for the use of patients suffering from asthmatic and pulmonary affections. The hospital was originally built in 1907 by Mrs. W. S. Whitwell, New York City, in memory of Mr. William Scollay Whitwell. The hospital maintains one free bed. Dr. Hobart P. Shattuck is resident physician.
J Am Med Assoc, May 1926; 86: 1472: EPINEPHRINE IN CARDIAC ASTHMA. To the Editor: -- I have a patient with cardiac asthma who is relieved by hypodermic injection of epinephrine. The injections leave ecchymoses or hematomas, however, and these red places remain sore for some time. Is there any treatment? Hobart P. Shattuck, M.D., Los Angeles.
J Am Med Assoc, Dec 1939; 113: 2445: PARTIAL DESTRUCTION OF NAIL BED. To the Editor: -- Because of a trauma, the distal half of the left thumb nail of a man is not adherent to the underlying tissues. He would like it remedied. If the surface of the underlying tissue should be denuded with acid or by mechanical means and a pressure dressing then applied, would the nail and tissue become adherent? Hobart P. Shattuck, M.D., Los Angeles.
J Am Med Assoc, Mar 1943; 121: 782: Hobart Parker Shattuck; Los Angeles ; Cornell University Medical College, New York, 1903; aged 64; died, December 10, in the California Hospital of carcinoma of the stomach.
Master pnID
AMH-PN3345
Src2 PCMSMin
PCMS-Min
History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673]
volume 6, page(s) 77
PCMS pnID
pn0963
OHB Checked
y
Residence(s)
Tucson
Los Angeles CA