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Period: 4000 BCE to 3000 BCE
Primitive Times
Illness and diseases were a punishment from the Gods
Tribal witch doctors treated illness with ceremonies
Herbs and plants used as medicines (morphine and digitalis)
Trepanation or trephining (surgically removing a piece of bone from the skull) -
Period: 3000 BCE to 300 BCE
Ancient Egyptians
Physicians were priests
Believed body was a system of channels for air, tears, blood, urine, sperm and feces.
Bloodletting or leeches used as medical treatment -
Period: 1700 BCE to 220
Ancient Chinese
Believed in the need to treat the whole body by curing the spirit and nourishing the body (holistic medicine)
Recorded a pharmacopoeia of medications based mainly on the use of herbs
Used therapies such as acupuncture -
Period: 1200 BCE to 200 BCE
Ancient Greeks
First to observe the human body and the effects of disease – led to modern medical sciences.
Believed illness is a result of natural causes
Used therapies such as massage, art therapy, and herbal treatment
Stressed diet and exercise as ways to prevent disease -
Period: 753 BCE to 410
Ancient Romans
First to organize medical care by providing care for injured soldiers
Later hospitals were religious and charitable institutions in monasteries and convents
First public health and sanitation systems by building sewers and aqueducts -
Period: 400 to 800
Dark Ages
Emphasis on saving the soul and study of medicine was prohibited
Prayer and divine intervention were used to treat illness & disease
Monks and priests provided custodial care for ill people
Medications were mainly herbal mixtures -
Period: 800 to 1400
Middle Ages
Renewed interest in medical practices of Greek and Romans
Bubonic Plague (Black death) killed 75% of population in Europe and Asia
Major diseases included smallpox, diphtheria, tuberculosis, typhoid, the plague, and malaria
Arabs began requiring physicians pass examinations and obtain licenses
Average life span was 20-35 years -
Period: 1350 to
Renaissance
Dissection of body led to increased understanding of anatomy and physiology
Rebirth of the science of medicine
Invention of printing press allowed medical knowledge to be shared -
16th and 17th Century
Cause of disease still not known – many people died from infections
Invention of the microscope allowed physicians to see disease-causing organisms.
Apothecaries (early pharmacists) made, prescribed, and sold medications