Ancient
world
Prehistoric medicine incorporated plants (herbalism),
animal parts and minerals. In many cases these materials were used ritually as
magical substances by priests, shamans,
or medicine men.
Well-known spiritual systems include animism
(the notion of inanimate objects having spirits), spiritualism
(an appeal to gods or communion with ancestor spirits); shamanism
(the vesting of an individual with mystic powers); and divination
(magically obtaining the truth). The field of medical anthropology examines the ways in which
culture and society are organized around or impacted by issues of health,
health care and related issues.
Early records on medicine have been
discovered from ancient Babylonian medicine, Egyptian medicine, Ayurvedic
medicine (in the Indian subcontinent), classical Chinese medicine (predecessor to
the modern traditional Chinese Medicine), and ancient Greek medicine and Roman medicine. The Egyptian Imhotep
(3rd millennium BC) is the first physician in history known by name. Earliest
records of dedicated hospitals come from Mihintale in Sri Lanka
where evidence of dedicated medicinal treatment facilities for patients are
found. The Indian surgeon Sushruta described numerous surgical operations, including the
earliest forms of plastic surgery.
The Greek physician Hippocrates, the "father of medicine",laid the foundation for a rational approach to medicine. Hippocrates introduced the Hippocratic Oath for physicians, which is still relevant and in use today, and was the first to categorize illnesses as acute, chronic, endemic and epidemic, and use terms such as, "exacerbation, relapse, resolution, crisis, paroxysm, peak, and convalescence".
The Greek physician Galen was also one of the
greatest surgeons of the ancient world and performed many audacious operations,
including brain and eye surgeries. After the fall of the Western Roman Empire and the onset of the Early Middle Ages,
the Greek tradition of medicine went into decline in Western Europe, although
it continued uninterrupted in the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire.
Most of our knowledge of ancient Hebrew medicine
during the 1st millennium BC comes from the Torah, i.e. the Five
Books of Moses,
which contain various health related laws and rituals. The Hebrew contribution
to the development of modern medicine started in the Byzantine Era,
with the physician Asaph the Jew.
Middle
ages
After 750 CE, the Muslim world had
the works of Hippocrates, Galen and Sushruta translated into Arabic, and Islamic physicians
engaged in some significant medical research. Notable Islamic medical pioneers
include the polymath,
Avicenna,
who, along with Imhotep and Hippocrates, has also been called the "father
of medicine".He wrote The Canon of Medicine, considered one of
the most famous books in the history of medicine. Others include Abulcasis, Avenzoar,
Ibn al-Nafis,
and Averroes.
Rhazes was one of first to question the
Greek theory of humorism,
which nevertheless remained influential in both medieval Western and medieval Islamic medicine.
The Islamic Bimaristan
hospitals were an early example of public hospitals.
In Europe, Charlemagne
decreed that a hospital should be attached to each cathedral and monastery and
the historian Geoffrey Blainey likened the activities of the Catholic Church in health care
during the Middle Ages to an early version of a welfare state: "It
conducted hospitals for the old and orphanages for the young; hospices for the
sick of all ages; places for the lepers; and hostels or inns where pilgrims
could buy a cheap bed and meal". It supplied food to the population during
famine and distributed food to the poor. This welfare system the church funded
through collecting taxes on a large scale and possessing large farmlands and
estates. The Benedictine order was noted for setting up hospitals and
infirmaries in their monasteries, growing medical herbs and becoming the chief
medical care givers of their districts, as at the great Abbey of Cluny.
The Church also established a network of cathedral schools
and universities where medicine was studied. The Schola Medica Salernitana in Salerno, looking
to the learning of Greek and Arab physicians, grew to be the finest medical
school in Medieval Europe.
Panorama of Siena's Santa Maria della Scala Hospital, one of
Europe's oldest hospitals. During the Middle Ages, the Catholic Church
established universities which revived the study of sciences - drawing on the
learning of Greek and Arab physicians in the study of medicine.
However, the fourteenth and
fifteenth century Black Death devastated both the Middle East and Europe, and it
has even been argued that Western Europe was generally more effective in
recovering from the pandemic than the Middle East. In the early modern period,
important early figures in medicine and anatomy emerged in Europe, including Gabriele Falloppio and William Harvey.
The major shift in medical thinking
was the gradual rejection, especially during the Black Death
in the 14th and 15th centuries, of what may be called the 'traditional
authority' approach to science and medicine. This was the notion that because
some prominent person in the past said something must be so, then that was the
way it was, and anything one observed to the contrary was an anomaly (which was
paralleled by a similar shift in European society in general – see Copernicus's rejection of Ptolemy's
theories on astronomy). Physicians like Vesalius
improved upon or disproved some of the theories from the past. The main tomes
used both by medicine students and expert physicians were Materia Medica
and Pharmacopoeia.
Andreas Vesalius
was an author of one of the most influential books on human anatomy,
De humani corporis fabrica. French
surgeon Ambroise Paré is considered as one of the fathers of surgery.
Bacteria and microorganisms were first observed with a microscope by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek in 1676, initiating the
scientific field microbiology.
Independently from Ibn al-Nafis, Michael Servetus
rediscovered the pulmonary circulation, but this discovery did
not reach the public because it was written down for the first time in the
"Manuscript of Paris"in 1546, and later published in the theological
work for which he paid with his life in 1553. Later this was described by Renaldus Columbus
and Andrea Cesalpino. Partly based on the works by
the Italian surgeon and anatomist Renaldus Columbus
the English physician William Harvey described the circulatory system. Herman Boerhaave
is sometimes referred to as a "father of physiology" due to his
exemplary teaching in Leiden and textbook 'Institutiones medicae' (1708). It is
said that the 17th-century French physician Pierre Fauchard
started dentistry
science as we know it today, and he has been named "the father of
modern dentistry".
Modern
Veterinary medicine was, for the
first time, truly separated from human medicine in 1761, when the French
veterinarian Claude Bourgelat founded the world's first
veterinary school in Lyon, France. Before this, medical doctors treated both
humans and other animals.
Modern scientific biomedical research (where results are testable
and reproducible)
began to replace early Western traditions based on herbalism, the Greek "four humours"
and other such pre-modern notions. The modern era really began with Edward Jenner's
discovery of the smallpox vaccine at the end of the 18th century
(inspired by the method of inoculation earlier practiced in Asia), Robert Koch's
discoveries around 1880 of the transmission of disease by bacteria, and then
the discovery of antibiotics around 1900.
The post-18th century modernity
period brought more groundbreaking researchers from Europe. From Germany
and Austria, doctors Rudolf Virchow, Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen, Karl Landsteiner
and Otto Loewi
made notable contributions. In the United Kingdom, Alexander Fleming,
Joseph Lister, Francis Crick
and Florence Nightingale are considered important. Spanish doctor Santiago Ramón y Cajal is considered the father
of modern neuroscience.
From New Zealand and Australia came Maurice Wilkins,
Howard Florey, and Frank Macfarlane Burnet.
In the United States, William Williams Keen, William Coley,
James D. Watson,
Italy (Salvador Luria), Switzerland (Alexandre Yersin),
Japan (Kitasato Shibasaburō), and France (Jean-Martin Charcot, Claude Bernard,
Paul Broca
and others did significant work). Russian Nikolai Korotkov
also did significant work, as did Sir William Osler
and Harvey Cushing.
As science and technology developed,
medicine became more reliant upon medications.
Throughout history and in Europe right until the late 18th century, not only
animal and plant products were used as medicine, but also human body parts and
fluids. Pharmacology
developed from herbalism and many drugs are still derived from plants
(atropine, ephedrine, warfarin, aspirin,
digoxin, vinca alkaloids, taxol, hyoscine, etc.). Vaccines
were discovered by Edward Jenner and Louis Pasteur.
The first antibiotic was arsphenamine
/ Salvarsan
discovered by Paul Ehrlich in 1908 after he observed that bacteria took up
toxic dyes that human cells did not. The first major class of antibiotics
was the sulfa drugs, derived by German chemists
originally from azo dyes.
Pharmacology has become increasingly
sophisticated; modern biotechnology allows drugs targeted towards specific
physiological processes to be developed, sometimes designed for compatibility
with the body to reduce side-effects. Genomics and knowledge of human genetics
is having some influence on medicine, as the causative genes of most monogenic genetic disorders
have now been identified, and the development of techniques in molecular biology
and genetics are influencing medical technology, practice and decision-making.
Evidence-based medicine is a contemporary movement
to establish the most effective algorithms
of practice (ways of doing things) through the use of systematic reviews
and meta-analysis.
The movement is facilitated by modern global information science, which allows as much of
the available evidence as possible to be collected and analyzed according to
standard protocols that are then disseminated to healthcare providers. The Cochrane Collaboration leads this movement. A
2001 review of 160 Cochrane systematic reviews revealed that, according to two
readers, 21.3% of the reviews concluded insufficient evidence, 20% concluded
evidence of no effect, and 22.5% concluded positive effect.
Patron
saints
There are a number of patron saints for
physicians, the most important of whom are Saint Luke the Evangelist the physician and
disciple of Christ, Saints Cosmas and Damian (3rd-century
physicians from Syria),
and Saint Pantaleon (4th-century physician from Nicomedia).
Archangel Raphael is also considered a patron
saint of physicians. In India and in Hinduism,
Dhanavantari,
a form of Lord Vishnu
and "Vaidyanatha" meaning 'Lord of Medicine', a form of Lord Shiva are the patron
deities of medicine.
The patron saints for surgeonsare Saint Luke the Evangelist, the physician anddisciple of Christ, Saints Cosmas and Damian (3rd-centuryphysicians from Syria), Saint Quentin(3rd-century saint from France), Saint Foillan(7th-century saint from Ireland),and Saint Roch(14th-century saint from France).
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