Medieval Medicine Flashcards

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1
Q

what did Ibn Sina encourage doctors to do and people to have

A

to observe and experiment

for people to have access to clean air and water

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2
Q

who wrote the Cannon of Medicine

what was it about

A

Ibn Sina
main medical textbook for doctors all over Europe until the 17th century
described over 700 medicines and their uses as well as how to diagnose disease

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3
Q

how many physicians were there in England in the 1300s

A

less than 100

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4
Q

how many hospitals was there in the east by the 1100s

A

one in every large town, but many had more

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5
Q

how were Islamic hospitals different from the west

A

lot more of them, often paid for by wealthy individuals to stay in keeping with their faith

treated the sick with herbal remedies and also prayer

also places of learning, often with attached pharmacies, libraries and lecture rooms and trainee doctors learning at people’s bedsides

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6
Q

how did Christianity hinder medical advancements

A

lots of control and taught disease was a punishment from God, no need to look for other treatments

did not allow dissections or for doctors to undergo their own experiments

controlled universities - only taught work of galen

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7
Q

how did Christianity progress medicine

A

monks in monasteries protected medical knowledge accumulated by the greeks by making copies of ancient books by hand

500 small hospitals (around 10 beds) by 1400

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8
Q

what were the medieval barber surgeons 3 main problems

what other problems did they have

A

bleeding - patients sometimes bled to death

pain - opium and hemlock used and made patients drowsy but could sometimes send them to sleep permanently

infection - wine, honey and vinegar could be used to clean the wound but they couldn’t stop an infection through unsterilised everything spreading

+ they also struggled due to a lack of anatomical understanding

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9
Q

who challenged Galen’s idea about pus being a sign of healing in a wound

A

father and son, Hugh and Theodoric of Lucca who were Italian surgeons

discovered through observations on the battlefield

encouraged use of bandages soaked in wine as a form of antiseptic

son, Theodoric, published a book in 1267

lacked popularity as it challenged the work of Galen

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10
Q

what were 3 public health problems in medieval towns

A

no access to clean water - people collected drinking water from rivers where they also dumped their waste and sewage and wells were often built next to cesspits

waste on the roads - people threw their rubbish out of the window, large piles accumulated and attracted rats

when hot, the Thames stank - people believed miasma spread disease

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11
Q

why was it difficult to keep medieval towns clean

A

overcrowding - more and more people moved to cities for work

rivers - used for drinking water and disposing of waste

germ theory not invented yet - people not interested in paying to clean up the towns and cities

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