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Topics: Surgery, public health and hospitals, ideas about causes
and treatments of disease,
Surgery over time
Medieval Surgery (medicine Stands still)
1. What sorts of surgery were done? – bloodletting to restore
the balance of the 4-humours,
amputation tooth extraction, trepanning
2. In what context was most surgery done (where was a lot of
surgery done) battlefields (war
3. Who would do surgery in a town? Barber surgeons
4. What was the main way of treating various war wounds?
Cauterisation
5. How did surgeons learn their trade? Becoming
apprentices/watching
6. How respected were surgeons compared to physicians?
Considered lower class
7. What was the priority in surgery? speed
8. Anaesthetics as we know them were not used. What is an
example of an attempt at an
anaesthetic? Opium/alcohol
9. What, all through time, were the 3 main problems with
surgery? Pain, infection and blood
loss (PIB)
10. Who was the most famous medieval English surgeon? John of
Arderne
11. How were some advancements made in medieval surgery? from
individuals both in Europe
and the Islamic world and the books they published
Surgery – Renaissance – the beginnings of Change
1. Continuity – look at the 11 questions above from medieval
times –of those questions, which
are the same in terms of surgery in the Renaissance? First 9
2. Who was the French surgeon who made progress in surgery? Pare
‘The father of modern
surgery’
3. What did he begin to use/change used ligatures to tie off
arteries to prevent bleeding
rather than doing cauterisation
4. How did chance help him? Ran out of boiling oil, which was
used to treat gunshot wounds,
so he used an ointment (based on an old Roman recipe) which
worked better
5. What was another significant development of this person?
Prosthetic limbs/artificial limbs
6. How significant were all of his developments? Not very, most
surgeons did not take up his
developments, his methods slowed surgeons; speed still the
priority due to PIB , dirty
ligatures could cause death by causing deep infections,
7. Who was a surgeon in ‘England at this time who read this
man’s work? William Clowes –
followed and used some of Pare’s work
8. If blood transfusions were done, what occurred? Tried using
animal to human transfusions
– resulted in death and thus blood transfusions banned
Surgery – 18th century – the beginnings of Change JOHN HUNTER
‘Father of Modern Surgery’
1. John Hunter was a British surgeon in the 18th century. How
did he learn do much about
surgery? was a war surgeon, dissected many bodies to learn how
they worked. His
dissections enabled him to learn about nature of disease,
infections, cancer and blood
circulation
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2. What are other reasons why John Hunter was a significant and
successful surgeon? Did a lot
of scientific research, wrote many books, trained many surgeons
in his scientific
approach/scientific method (Edward Jenner was his pupil), would
not shy away from
experimentation on himself
Surgery – 19th century – A revolution in Medicine
1. How much had surgery changed up to the 19th century? Not
much, the main problems
were still PIB, speed was still the mark of a good surgeon, New
weapons brought new
wounds and new treatments (from swords to guns) but little real
advancement made
– real cause of disease and infection still not known
2. Anaesthetics – who discovered a very good anaesthetic and
what was this anaesthetic
and when? Simpson and chloroform, 1847
3. Antiseptics – who discovered a good anti-septic and what was
it, and what year was it?
Lister and Carbolic Acid, 1867
4. Blood loss – who discovered blood groups and when?
Landsteiner, 1901
5. Knowing about blood groups – what could then be done
successfully? Blood
transfusions
6. What were some reasons to oppose anaesthetics? Deeper surgery
meant more
infection which meant higher death rate, dosages – overdoses
meant death, speed –
surgery could be ‘slowed down’ but the mind set of surgeons was
still to go quickly,
fighting the pain was seen as fighting to stay alive
7. Who famously died of an overdose for minor surgery? Hannah
Greener
8. Who famously loved chloroform (used it in child birth) Queen
Victoria
9. What were some reasons to oppose using antiseptics? Germ
theory not yet universally
accepted, it was messy – needed saturate a lot of the equipment
and this made hands
crack and bleed, conservative thinking – surgeons didn’t want to
change
10. The period from 1850 – 1870 was called the ‘Black Period of
Surgery’. Why? Because
despite advancements in anaesthetics and antiseptics and the
fact that germ theory
was not discovered and then not immediately accepted the death
rate actually rose
due to deeper surgery being done therefore deeper infections,
and also from incorrect
dosages of anaesthetics
11. What is it called when the environment is sterile?
aseptic
12. How did Lister help Pasteur? His work on antiseptics helped
to get germ theory
accepted
13. Who was the first female surgeon? Elizabeth Garrett
Anderson
Surgery – Modern Medicine Into the 20th century
1. How did WWI help advance surgery? x-rays – mobile x-ray units
helped identify where
shrapnel was, blood transfusions – blood could be stored (use of
sodium citrate to prevent
clotting and later refrigeration) meant that problem of blood
loss was overcome – no
longer had to do person to person transfusions, plastic surgery
– facial wounds/skin
grafting from burning, shrapnel wounds – eg to the head improved
surgery, infection more
importance placed on cleaning wounds and equipment
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2. How did WWII improve surgery? plastic surgery, heart surgery,
blood transfusions- blood
banks had developed – donations of blood,
3. What are examples of further developments in the 20th
century? Organ transplant, key hole
surgery/microsurgery, heart transplants, cancer tumour
removal
Factors affecting surgery
Explain how the following factors either helped or hindered the
development of surgery
War
Religion
Conservative Thinking
Enquiring Thinking
Role of the Individual
Science and Technology
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Public Health – Reaction/Prevention – Town Life
Medieval Public Health (medicine Stands still)
1. Define the following terms
-privy – medieval toilet – most towns had 1
-cesspit – the dug out hole under the privy where human waste
went
-gong farmer – the people who cleaned out the cesspits – usually
once per year
-raker – people who cleaned the street
2. What waste could be found on the streets/rivers in medieval
towns? Animal waste - from
butchering eg blood, guts dumped on street and in town; human
waste – rubbish; animal faeces
(poo) human faeces,
3. Why was there little investment in public health in the
middle ages? Real cause of disease not
known, money spent on wars as that was the priority and public
health/the government taking
responsibility for the health of the people was not a priority,
any laws that existed weren’t
enforced
4. Why was there some investment public health? Miasma
(corrupted, smelly air) was believed as a
cause therefore keeping smell away by clearing away rubbish was
thought to help with illness
5. Why were monasteries better when it came to public health?
Away from towns, built by rivers in
a way that waste would flow away, had filtering systems and
pipes for clean water, monks had a
routine of cleanliness as it was seen as a sign of piety
‘cleanliness was next to Godliness’, had
access to medical books that explained the Roman ideas of public
health
6. The Black Death 1348 – this can be used as an example of why
poor public health was a
contributing factor to the deadly epidemic.
a. What did people think caused the Black Death? God punishing
them, Jews, planets aligning in a
bad way, miasma
b. Who were the people who whipped themselves? Flagellants
c. Why did the whip themselves? To take on the sins of others
and themselves and self punish in
order to be spared from getting the plague
d. Why did it spread so quickly? Over-crowding in towns,
unhygienic conditions (which attracted
rats), lack of knowledge of real cause of disease, bodies buried
in shallow graves – which could be
dug up by dogs/raise if there was heavy rain (thus attracting
rats), no organised regular way of
cleaning the streets, no enforcement of any laws that might try
to keep towns clean
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e. How did people try to deal with the plague? Praying,
bloodletting, drinking mercury, strapping
shaved chickens to buboes, in some cases they tried to
quarantine
f. Consequences of the Black Death – what were the effects?
Negative – 30 – 50% of the population
died, no ‘class’ was spared, people thought the end of the world
was coming, food shortages as
lack of population meant crops didn’t get harvested, starvation
Positive – short term
empowerment of peasants – Lords lost peasants but still needed
to farm land, therefore peasants
had bargaining power and could go to the ‘highest bidding’ Lord.
This ended with the Statute of
Labourers Act of 1351 which lowered peasants wages and
disempowered them.
7. In summary how would you describe medieval public health?
Reactive rather than preventative,
not a priority, some laws based either on reaction to a problem
eg the Black Death or due to the
link with miasma, not preventative- no logical or committed way
of organising public health, any
laws or regulations that existed weren’t enforced
Renaissance Public Health– the beginnings of Change
1. Change/Continuity – how similar was public health in the
middle ages and public health in
the Renaissance – very similar – little had changed
2. The 1665 Plague Epidemic – helps us to understand public
health in the Renaissance
a. Causes – how much change from the middle ages? No change –
the same – believed
causes were God, planets, miasma,
b. Treatments- How much change from the medieval period? Mostly
the same. More
examples of treatments were smoking to keep away poised air,
burning tar in the
streets, bloodletting,
c. Government/Officials reaction – how they dealt with the
plague – was it more organised
than in the middle ages? Yes there were some changes such as
‘women searchers’
used to examine bodies to see if they had the plague, quarantine
based on what
women searchers concluded, watchmen to stand guard to impose
quarantine, houses
painted with red corss; people ordered to sweep their doorsteps
and keep them clean;
animals not allowed to roam the streets; large crowds were
banned – eg no
theatre/plays allowed;
3. How would you describe Public Health in the Renaissance? Very
similar to the middle ages.
Reaction rather than prevention. Main example of reaction was
the Plague epidemic of
1665. Still not a priority
19th Century Public Health (1800s) – a revolution in Public
Health
1. Describe towns in the early 19th century. Over crowded, large
families living in small rooms
in back to back housing with poor ventilation, unhygienic –
waste from humans animals,
no organised public heath, poor water supply
2. Why were towns like that? Industrialisation meant mass
migration from countryside to
towns to work in factories; people had to live close to where
they worked (no transport)
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3. What was the prevailing (main) belief about government
intervention in terms of public
health and alleviating (lessening/helping) poverty? Laissez
faire – ‘leave alone/don’t get
involved
4. Why was there this attitude? For public health – no knowledge
of real cause of disease,
those in government were rich and weren’t affected by the poor
living conditions; for
poverty it was the mind set that the poor were their own cause
of poverty – they should
help themselves
5. Cholera – this was a new disease – When were the 4 main
cholera epidemics? 1832/3,
1848/49, 1854/44, 1866/67
6. Who was Edwin Chadwick and what did he do that was
significant? Minister of workhouses,
who wrote a report on the labouring poor – he advised that if
the poor were helped then
they wouldn’t have to go to workhouses – so the government
should spend tax/rates on
public health instead of workhouses
7. When did Edwin Chadwick produce his report? 1842
8. Why did it take until 1848 for his report to be used?
Reaction of the government to the
Cholera epidemic – decided to use some of his recommendations
from his report
9. What was introduced in the 1948 and what was a major
limitation of it? First Public Health
Act, limitation was that it wasn’t compulsory. People didn’t
believe in it
10. Several significant things occurred in 1854. List them
another cholera epidemic, led to First
public health act being scrapped as people felt that the actions
hadn’t worked, John Snow
works out that cholera is in the water; does this by mapping
where cholera is most
concentrated and then linked it to the pump that was being used,
and then took handle
off of the pump. John Snow used scientific method
11. Why was John Snow not believed? Germ theory was not yet
discovered
12. What occurred in 1858 and why was it significant? The Great
Stink, Parliament (therefore
the rich) were affected by lack of public health and realised
they needed to do something
13. What was one of the first actions to be taken after the
great stink, and by whom? Sewer
system began in London, by Joseph Bazalgette
14. What 2 things occurred in 1867 that encouraged the
government to take action? Another
cholera epidemic, more working class men got the vote, therefore
helping the poor
working classes will get MPs votes
15. What was introduced in 1875? Second public Health Act –
compulsory
16. What 2 social reformers did research into the poor in the
late 19th and early 20th centuries,
and why were they significant? Charles Booth and Seebohm
Rowntree – showed that the
second public health act had not solved all of the problems with
illness and poverty and
that more work needed to be done
17. What did Rowntree produce and why was it significant? The
Poverty Line – proved that at
certain times of life eg childhood, old age, people fell into
poverty and that these
circumstances were beyond the control of the working
classes.
18. What did the Boer War reveal? That ‘recruits’ were under
weight and under height and did
not meet army regulations, indicating that poverty was still a
major problem in England
19. What occurred in 1906 and why was it significant? An
election – the Liberal government
won a landslide victory did so because they said that they would
introduce reforms
(changes) to improve public health/poverty, forcing and
revealing a change in the laissez
faire attitude
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20. List the Liberal Reforms that were introduced between 1006
and 1911. 1906 Free School
Meals Act, 1907 Free Medical Inspections, 1908 Old Age Pensions
Act, 1908 Children’s act
1909 Labour Exchanges Act (like a modern day job centre), 1909
Housing Act – back to
back housing banned, 1911 National Insurance Act
21. Why was there opposition to the National Insurance Act?
Workers had to make a
contribution to the sickness/unemployment fund – they earned
very little as it was and
didn’t want the deduction, also they felt they would never see
their money if they didn’t
get ill/unemployed
22. Who was the politician behind these reforms? David Lloyd
George
23. Why were the reforms significant? Acceptance by more people
that government must get
involved, acceptance by more people that poor weren’t poor as a
result of their actions
and that factors out of their control contributed to poverty,
acceptance that poverty and
illness were linked, another step away from Laissez faire. The
beginnings of The Welfare
State
24. Effect of the wars on Public Health – what were the effects?
Change of attitude – the
country/people had sacrificed a great deal and that made them
think that a better fairer
society was needed and that included a better fairer healthcare
system. In WWII the poor
health/small size of evacuated children from the cities to the
countryside alarmed many
middle class people
25. What occurred in 1942 and why was it significant? The
Beveridge Report – suggested that
people had the right to be free of the 5 giants that ruined
lives –
disease/poverty/ignorance/idleness/squalor (filth) and therefore
public health including
health care and education and help with finding employment
should be introduced for
everyone. Said government should intervene from cradle to
grave
26. What occurred in 1948 and why was it significant? The
National Health Service – NHS –
universal healthcare free at the point of access. The Welfare
State was created, the
government took control of hospitals, training of medical
profession, prevention not
reaction
27. Why was there opposition to the NHS? Cost, still some hung
on to the laissez faire belief
and that the poor should help themselves, doctors thought they
would lose freedom and
money from private patients
28. Into the 20th and 21st century - what have been some further
developments? Healthy living
advice – healthy diet, exercise advice, vaccinations, help with
stopping smoking, running
of hospitals and training
How did the following factors affect public health?
Role of the Individual
War
Government
Attitudes – Conservative/Enquiry
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Ideas about the cause of disease and ideas about treatment
Medieval beliefs – ideas about the cause of disease and
treatments –
Medicine stands still
1. What was Hippocrates theory called? How was this used to
explain health/illness? 4-
humours theory – the body was made up of 4 humours = phlegm,
black bile, yellow bile,
blood. If these are in balance you are healthy and if they are
unbalanced then you are
unhealthy. Treatment done should be to restore the balance
2. What is the connection between Galen and Hippocrates? Galen
was a firm believer in
Hippocrates and kept the 4-humours theory popular and believed
for 100s of years
3. What are treatments based on the 4-humours theory? Bleeding
(purging) by cutting open a
vein or by using leeches, something that would make you vomit/go
to the toilet (again
based on the idea of purging),Galen’s theory of opposites (if
you have a cold, eat ‘warm’
food like pepper
4. What were the main ideas/beliefs about the cause of illness?
Beliefs based on the 4
humours/Imbalance of humours, miasma, punishment from God, other
supernatural ideas
– eg astrology – planets out of alignment
5. What were other treatments? Remedies based on the
supernatural – such as prayers or
astrology
6. What was used to diagnose illness/if there was an imbalance?
Urine chart – doctor looked
at /tasted/smelled a sample of urine and compared the colour to
a chart and that chart
had suggested diagnosis and remedies ; Zodiac Man image used to
show a physician the
link between a zodiac sign and parts of the body and also
‘time’– therefore it could inform
doctors on when to treat the patient and what remedies to use,
or where to cut the body
if bleeding was being done
7. Who would treat you if you were ill?/Who could you go to if
you were ill If you were rich – a
trained physician (there weren’t many trained physicians); ‘wise
women’ in the villages
who had knowledge of herbal remedies, they would also be
midwives; the ‘Lady of the
Manor’ who also had knowledge of herbal remedies; an apothecary
(like a modern day
chemist, would be in a town); a priest, praying to saints (who
were attached to specific
illnesses), monastery hospitals, (barber surgeons for surgery eg
pulling a tooth)
8. Where were physicians trained and what was the priority of
the training? At universities;
took about 7 years. Priority was to prove Galen was right – they
would read Galen, watch
dissections based on Galen’s teachings
9. How did Christianity influence ideas about causes of illness
and treatments? Believed in
looking after the sick but not necessarily finding the
cause/cure as illness came from God;
Illness was a test of faith, punishment from God, so you
shouldn’t interfere with God’s
plan. Treatments could be prayer, going on pilgrimage to a
particular shrine, treatments
based on Galen, treatments in monastery hospitals – rest,
cleaner environment,
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10. How did Christianity hinder the development of medicine? the
church controlled the
universities where physicians were trained therefore its aim was
to uphold the old ideas
and to discourage new discoveries and thinking; approved of
Galen as he believed in 1 God
therefore Galen’s ideas fit with Christianity therefore they did
not want his ideas
challenged; they saw the doctor not as a healer but as someone
who could diagnose what
was wrong and predict the course of the illness, and give
reasons why God has done this
11. Islamic world – who were important people in the Islamic
world? Ibn Sina/Avicenna/Avi
Senna (same person, different spelling, pronounced roughly the
same), Al Razi
12. Why was medicine more advanced in the Islamic world?
Avicenna translated many books
from Ancient world into Arabic, and then these works went to
Europe to be translated;
Books/libraries/knowledge in Europe was lost after the Romans
left so having the books
from the Islamic world was crucial to Europe, training – medical
students received
practical training; hospitals – were clean, well ventilated; Al
Razi encouraged challenging
Galen, did research on drugs/disease
Renaissance Ideas/Beliefs about the cause of Illness and
treatments– the
beginnings of Change - How scientific was this period? How much
enquiry
was done in this period? How many of the new ideas were
accepted?
1. What were features of the Renaissance in general?
Technological developments – printing
press, microscopes; new ideas/enquiring thinking (by some, not
all people); age of
exploration/new lands – many European nations exploring the
world, beginning to set up
empires/colonise the world; new inventions eg gunpowder – new
wounds mean new
treatments need to be found; new learning – scientific
observation/scientific method is
beginning to be used more, people began to question previously
accepted truths; new art
– based on more realistic human form; The Renaissance started in
Italy and spread
throughout Europe through books – aided by the printing
press
2. What, in terms of beliefs in the cause of illness, remained
the same from the Middle Ages to
the Renaissance? Beliefs based on the 4 humours/Imbalance of
humours, miasma,
punishment from God, other supernatural ideas – eg astrology-
planets out of alignment
3. How did exploring new lands help with medicine? It resulted
in new treatments due to new
plants being brought back to Europe – eg tobacco for toothache,
cinchona tree bark which
is aspirin – used for pain
4. Quackery – What is a Quack? Unqualified ‘doctor’ who sold
medicine but who know that
the medicines did not work. They were ‘conmen’ of the medicine
world. Interested in
making money. They often sold ‘cure-all ‘medicines
5. Nicholas Culpepper - Why was he important? He wrote ‘The
Complete Herbal’ in English,
classified herbs; moved away from examining urine – a step
forward in natural treatments
and scientific methods, but not a huge step forward
6. Individuals – Vesalius (Belgian, 1500s)
a. In what area of medicine were Vesalius’ main findings?
Anatomy – he dissected
many bodies and studied the skeletons/tried putting skeletons
together
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b. How did he get his ideas across? His books eg the Fabric of
the Human Body with
the aid of new technology – the printing press
c. In terms of Galen what did Vesalius do? Proved him wrong in
terms of anatomy –
eg jawbone not made up of 2 bones, but one.
d. How accepted was Vesalius? Not universally accepted – many
said that the human
body must have changed since Galen’s time, rather than consider
that Galen must
have been wrong
e. How did Vesalius contribute to medicine in England? His books
were read in
England and it influenced thinking in England
f. Who, in the Renaissance period, got ‘better’ due to Vesalius’
work/discoveries? No
one – the significance was long term not short term
7. Individuals – Harvey (English) ( 1600s)
a. In what areas of medicine were Harvey’s main findings? Heart,
blood, blood circulation
– the heart acts as a pump to push/circulate the blood.
Circulation is a one-way
system, arteries carry blood away from the heart and veins carry
it back to the heart
b. What technological advancement inspired Harvey study the
heart and its function? The
pump
c. In terms of Galen, what did Harvey do? Blood not manufactured
in the liver, blood
didn’t get used up; the heart, not the liver (as Galen had said)
was the centre of the
body
d. How accepted was Harvey? Not universally accepted, most still
believed Galen
e. Who, in the Renaissance period, got ‘better’ due to Vesalius’
work/discoveries? No one
– the significance was long term not short term
8. Superstitious beliefs/treatments in the Renaissance – besides
God and astrology, identify
other typical examples of superstitious beliefs/treatments of
the Renaissance. Bezoar Stone
– stone from stomach of a goat said to cure all poisons, King’s
touch – for scrofula
(swelling of glands, also known as ‘the King’s evil’)
Early Modern – 1700s – Edward Jenner 1798 (and into 1800s)
1. What is Edward Jenner known for, and what disease is he
associated with? First vaccination;
small pox
2. How did he make his discovery? Noticed that milkmaids with
cow pox didn’t get small pox,
experimented – injected James Phipps with cow pox, the cow pox
ran its course, then he
injected Phipps with small pox, Phipps survived small pox,
Jenner then promoted the idea
that small pox could be prevented by having injections of cow
pox
3. What opposition did Jenner face, and from whom? Jenner
couldn’t explain how it worked;
God – people thought that injection of ‘animal matter’ into a
human body went against
God’s plans – it was disgusting to them; Inoculators –
inoculation was not new and
inoculators charged money so income was lost; those physicians
who were ‘jealous’ that a
‘country doctor’ made a breakthrough, not them – Jenner not
‘fashionable’;
4. How influential was his discovery?/What impact did it have?
Mixed – 1800s – in 1840
vaccination free to infants/young children (reaction to small
pox epidemic in 1837), 1850s
small pox vaccine became compulsory but this was not enforced
(link to public health
section – laissez faire attitude of government); Anti-vaccine
league 1860s – opposed
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vaccine; 1871 – compulsory and parents could be fined if didn’t
arrange for children to
have it; by 1980 – small pox eradicated (completely gone) from
the human population
19th century Ideas/Beliefs about the cause of Illness and
treatments – a
revolution in medicine
This part also includes 20th century and beyond…
1. Besides the 4-humours theory, miasma, God, what was another
belief of the cause of
illness? Spontaneous generation – microbes/germs appear as if by
magic when something
rotted – the disease caused the microbe not the microbe caused
the disease
2. Everyday treatments – What were some common everyday
treatments that could be found
in the home? Opium powders, laudanum (opium in alcohol) (often
given to children to
‘calm’ them), aspirin. Medicines were unregulated so anyone
could make them and could
put anything in them – arsenic and mercury were common
ingredients in medicine.
3. Explain the significance of 1861 and the person involved.
Germ theory – the real cause of
illness is at last identified by Louis Pasteur – a French
scientist
4. Germ theory was not initially accepted in England– what
helped it get accepted? 1. Cattle
Plague 1866 - a quarantine of the cows stopped the spread and
enabled English scientist
(Beale) to identify microbe; 2. Joseph Lister – his work on
antiseptics (carbolic acid for
surgery) were based on Pasteur’s idea of Germ Theory; 3. Tyndall
– a scientist who
believed in Germ Theory and lectured on it; Typhoid fever –
Koch’s work had helped to
find this microbe – typhoid fever was a common problem in
England
5. Koch – German doctor – how did he build on Pasteur’s work? He
identified which microbes
were which disease – something that Pasteur couldn’t do
6. What did Koch do in order to find the microbes? Stained them,
photographed them –
enlarged them using strong photographic lens
7. Which microbe/disease do we associate with Koch, as he found
it, as it was so small that
previous scientists and doctors couldn’t find it? TB
(Tuberculosis)
8. Vaccines Pasteur and Koch’s work was essential to developing
vaccines. Which one found
the first human vaccine and what was the disease? Pasteur,
rabies.
9. Vaccines and other cures – Pasteur introduced bacteriology
and Koch had built on this.
There were several factors that pushed their work in this field
forward. What are those
factors and what do they mean? War – France and Germany were at
war – disease caused
more deaths than wounds (eg dysentery) therefore finding
cures/vaccinations would
mean healthier army therefore better chance of victory;
Government/finance – linked to
war, the governments of both countries were motivated to invest
in their research to find
cures and vaccines; Luck – ‘Chicken Cholera’ Pasteur’s assistant
by mistake injected a
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chicken with weakened sample of cholera – built up immunity and
survived the
experiment of injecting the chicken with cholera – Pasteur could
not prove how
vaccinations worked (built on Jenner; Pasteur had read Jenner)
Individual Character (role
of the individual) both were determined and motivated, and their
rivalry kept them even
more motivated; Communication – Pasteur’s demonstrations and
talks about anthrax –
and news of Koch’s work spread in articles in the medical
journal ‘The Lancet’; Teamwork
– other scientists were hired to work on vaccines or other
chemical cures for the diseases
that were identified;
10. Fleming – What discovery is he associated with? What year?
What factor? Discovery of
penicillin (first antibiotic), 1928, Chance – he didn’t clean up
and when he returned mould
was growing in the uncleaned petri dishes and the mould was
killing the bacteria that he
had been working on
11. What hindered the development of Fleming’s findings just
after he discovered it? Fleming
didn’t believe it was an antibiotic and believed it was a
natural antiseptic; Fleming didn’t
inject penicillin into an animal to prove it could kill
bacteria; few people took interest in
Fleming’s work
12. Who pushed Fleming’s findings forward, and in what year?
Florey and Chain; 1938
13. What did these 2 men do that was significant? They began
experimenting, asked for money
from government and got very little, so had to be innovative in
getting enough penicillin to
test on humans – tests results were mixed; they ended up getting
money from the
American government – WWII saw high injury rate/surgery rate and
this and Florey and
Chain showed them the effect of penicillin; Pearl Harbour Attack
motivated US
government to give funding to mass produce penicillin; by D-D
(1944) all soldiers had
penicillin (antibiotics) on them.
14. What was the long term impact of Fleming’s findings? Massive
impact. More types of
antibiotic were developed. This meant that deeper surgery could
be done, chemotherapy:
those having this cancer treatment need antibiotics to help
fight any bacteria that
weakened immune system can’t deal with
15. Crick and Watson – What are they known for? What year was
their discovery made? DNA,
1953, DNA leads to gene therapy, knowledge of diseases
genetically passed on, genetic
screening for this; in future could be personalised medicine
based on your gene profile
16. Other treatments in the 20th century – The second half of
the 20th century saw an explosion
of drugs and treatments and full government intervention (NHS
1948) in medicine. List a few
of the treatments/breakthroughs) full range of free vaccines,
joint replacements (eg hip
replacements, knee replacements), MRI scans/3-d imaging,
micro-surgery, organ
transplants eg heart, lung, liver, cancer treatments,
endoscopes, skin grafting,
17. Factors – What are the factors for why drugs and treatments
have developed greatly in the
late 20th century? War – WWI and WWII meant greater government
investment in drug
development and technology; Government and Finance – connects to
war, but also to
investment in research to find treatments/new drugs, finance
screening for diseases – the
government takes a full role in the prevention and treatment of
all illness and disease,
Change in attitudes – enquiry – it is a priority to protect the
health of the nation and
therefore society accepts the taxing that is involved in this,
also challenging attitudes and
the quest for knowledge is admired and encouraged, Individual
Character – geniuses now
get funding to continue their work eg Crick and Watson
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18. Beyond mainstream medicine – what are examples of
alternative medicine? aromatherapy,
hypnotherapy, homeopathy, acupuncture
19. What is antibiotic resistance and why is it a problem? When
bacteria evolve and become
resistant/stronger than the antibiotic used to kill it. This
means that there may not be
antibiotics that will kill germs and therefore this has an
impact – the body will need to
fight the germs with its own immune system – if the immune
system isn’t strong enough
(eg someone is having chemotherapy and their immune system is
significantly weakened)
then they need antibiotics as their body can’t fight the
germs.
Hospitals Over time
Medieval Hospitals – Medicine Stands Still
1. Where were most hospitals situated? Monasteries
2. What was the main priority of treatment? Rest and recover in
a quiet, cleaner space. More
like a present day ‘care homes’. Hospitals often looked after
poor elderly people. Finding
cure not a priority. Prayer was main treatment, food provided
(better diet), no wards
3. Who would be treating the sick? Nuns, monks, no doctor would
be present in the hospital
4. How were hospitals funded? By charity, by the church
5. Who was not allowed in hospitals? Those with contagious
diseases, lepers had their own
hospital, called Lazer houses and were outside of the towns,
pregnant women
6. What are some names of hospitals? St Giles, St Bartholomew’s
(St Barts – still exists today)
7. Islamic Hospitals - - How were Islamic hospitals different?
Emphasis on caring for sick and
finding cure, by 1100 every large town had a hospital providing
medical care and prayers
for the sick, cleaner, different types eg hospitals for those
with mental health illness
Renaissance – Hospitals in the Renaissance – the beginnings of
change
Wider historical context – Henry VIII was instrumental in the
Reformation in England (the change in
the church and the introduction of Protestantism in England) and
part of this was the dissolution of
the monasteries (the closing of the monasteries). This of course
had a major impact on hospitals as it
changed ‘where they were’
1. How were hospitals funded? by the King – to keep up hospitals
and by wealthy people
2. How were hospitals the same as in the medieval period? Still
places of rest, simple
remedies like a good diet, and prayer. No priority to cure
1700s/18th century – ‘Hospital Boom’ – many hospitals built in
this time – the
beginnings of change
1. Voluntary hospitals – who set these up? Wealthy people funded
these. Guy’s hospital in
London is an example of this
2. What are some differences between these hospitals and the
medieval ones? No longer just
a place to stay and rest – they began to use new ways of
treating the sick. There was a
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move away from ‘punishment from God’ idea to the idea of using
scientific
method/observation to diagnose/treat/cure patients. Doctors
began to receive training as
medical schools were attached to hospitals, doctors then began
to work in hospitals. They
treated poor for free, and charged the wealthy for treatment.
Specialist hospitals set up eg
Foundling hospitals set up (foundlings are orphans – so sick,
homeless orphans were given
hospital treatment) Harvey worked in a hospital,
3. In what ways were they the same? Nurses untrained and
unskilled, there weren’t wards for
different illnesses, surgery not done in hospitals
1800s/19th century Hospitals – a revolution in medicine
1. Florence Nightingale is the major person for hospital
reform/change for the better. Which
war did she treat soldiers? Crimean War 1850s
2. How did she reform hospitals? Set up wards for different
illnesses/organised hospitals, ,
trained nurses and gave nurses strict rules to work by, set up
first nurse training school,
cleaned hospitals/belief in hygiene, ventilation,
3. Did she believe in Germ theory? No – she believed miasma
20th century Hospitals
Wider Context - Germ Theory- once germ theory was accepted,
hospitals continued to
improve in terms of wards, hygiene and training of
nurses/doctors
1. Was it necessary to pay for hospital and medical treatment at
the beginning of the 20th
century? Yes
2. What occurred in 1948 that had a significant impact on
hospitals? Creation of NHS/Full
Welfare State, government takes over all hospitals- takes over
funding, training of medical
professionals, regulation of medicines (pharmaceuticals) ,
investing in technology; surgery
moves into hospitals
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Significant Individuals Over time
Below is a list of significant individuals who had a major
impact on medicine. Explain what
they did and why it was significant
Hippocrates
Galen
Pare
Harvey
Vesalius
John Hunter
Jenner
Pasteur
Koch
Lister
Simpson
Landsteiner
Archibald McIndoe
Edwin Chadwick
Bazalgette
John Snow
Charles Booth
Seebohm Rowntree
David Lloyd George
Beveridge
Bevin
Fleming
Other Important Individuals that you can
use as examples
Ibn Sina (Avicenna) – ‘The Galen of Islam’ -
his work/book translations were used to
train doctors in Europe
John Ardene – example of an English
surgeon in medieval times
Nicholas Culpepper – wrote the ‘The
complete herbal’ – helped move the 18th
century to more scientific
Thomas Sydenham– helped move the 18th
century to more scientific; critical of quack
doctors, promoted observation
Clowes – example of an English surgeon in
the Renaissance – was influenced by Pare
Charlton Bastian – had to be argued against
as he promoted spontaneous generation –
Tyndall helped to argue against his views
(Bastian was a hindrance to the acceptance
of Germ Theory in Britain
John Tyndall – helped promote Germ
theory in England and lectured in England
about Koch’s findings