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Greeks: Hippocrates Context What was Hippocrates responsi- ble for? Hippocrac Oath 4 Humours Creaon of medical books Observaonal medicine Natural, not supernatural treatments Hippocrac Oath
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Hippocratic Oath - WordPress.com · Hippocratic Oath 4 Humours Creation of medical books Observational medicine Natural, not supernatural treatments Hippocratic Oath . Development

Mar 30, 2021

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Page 1: Hippocratic Oath - WordPress.com · Hippocratic Oath 4 Humours Creation of medical books Observational medicine Natural, not supernatural treatments Hippocratic Oath . Development

Greeks: Hippocrates

Context

What was Hippocrates responsi-

ble for?

Hippocratic Oath

4 Humours

Creation of medical books

Observational medicine

Natural, not supernatural

treatments

Hippocratic Oath

Page 2: Hippocratic Oath - WordPress.com · Hippocratic Oath 4 Humours Creation of medical books Observational medicine Natural, not supernatural treatments Hippocratic Oath . Development

Development Why was this important

The Hippocratic oath

This was important because……

Books This was important because……

Page 3: Hippocratic Oath - WordPress.com · Hippocratic Oath 4 Humours Creation of medical books Observational medicine Natural, not supernatural treatments Hippocratic Oath . Development

Romans: Galen

Page 4: Hippocratic Oath - WordPress.com · Hippocratic Oath 4 Humours Creation of medical books Observational medicine Natural, not supernatural treatments Hippocratic Oath . Development

Why were people still reading Galen in the medieval period?

Page 5: Hippocratic Oath - WordPress.com · Hippocratic Oath 4 Humours Creation of medical books Observational medicine Natural, not supernatural treatments Hippocratic Oath . Development

Islamic medicine

The teachings of Islam encouraged cleanliness and personal hygiene. They were not to pray until their bodies and

clothes were spotlessly clean.

Hospitals were run by the government. There were separate wards for each sex and often for different diseases as

well.

Only qualified physicians were allowed to practice medicine and hospitals were considered places of learning as

well as healing centres. Most hospitals also had libraries containing translated medical texts including those of Ga-

len and Hippocrates. Detailed records of patients, their medical treatment and their progress were kept.

Patients were first treated with physiotherapy and diet. If this failed drugs would be used and finally, surgery.

Islam teaches that God provides a cure for every illness and so physicians sought to find new cures and remedies.

The science of Chemistry was considered very important in Islam and as a result man new drugs were developed.

The Islamic Materia Medica (substances used in medicine) grew due to links with both the West and the East.

Dissection was forbidden by the Islamic religion and so Islamic doctors knowledge of anatomy was not as advanced

as their knowledge of physiology and remedies.