Knowledge about
their way of life
comes from
archeological finds
and the current
culture of people
who haven't changed
their living ways
Nomads - people who
travelled in search of food,
following animals to survive
and had temporary shelters
Believed in the
supernatural and
thought that evil
spirits caused disease
To treat people,
herbal remedies
would often be
given
People would go to see a medicine
man (half priest, half doctor), so he
could use trepanning ( cutting a hole
in the skull ) to 'get rid' of evil spirits
Slow progress as they believed
in superstitions and the
supernatural, even though cave
paintings show bulls with
daggers in their hearts, showing
they had little understanding
Ancient Egypt
(3000BC - 400BC)
Thought the
body's channels
became blocked
just like the Nile
The body could only be
treated by taking laxatives,
vomiting or being leeched
Trading meant they
gained and shared
their knowledge
First people to write
using hieroglyphics
on papyrus
Still believed in the
supernatural and that
wearing charms would
ward away evil spirits
Carried out simple
operations, like
cutting tumours
Mummification helped them learn
about the locations of vital organs
but the heart and brain were not
allowed to be touched as it was a
religious ceremony, so it had to be
done as quick as possible
Ancient Greece (800BC - 400BC)
Built healing
temples called
Asclepions, named
after the Greek God
of healing, Asclepius
At an Asclepion the sick would
bathe, make a gift to the gods
and rest and would sleep in a
dormitory and be cured by
Asclepius' daughters' and a snake
A typical Asclepion consisted of
baths, gyms, an athletic stadium
and a theatre seating 14,000 people
Carried out simple operations
using simple surgical tools during
wars and learnt about setting
broken and dislocated bones, even
though it was little surgical
progress compared the Egyptians
They came to believe that
disease had natural causes
and could be prevented and
believed in keeping themselves
clean. they also tried to eat
the corret food for the time of
year and tried to exercise
HIPPOCRATES put forward the
theory of the four humours, that
the body had to be in balance and
were connected to the seasons. It
was incorrect but set medical
development in the right directions
HIPPOCRATES also believed in
clinical observation, that doctors
had to observe their patient,
recognise an illness and suggest
a cure. He also stated that
personal hygiene and exercise
could prevent disease
ARISTOTLE'S studies led HIPPOCRATES
to suggest that the heart provides heat
to the body while the brain cools it
down. Although this was wrong, it
provided a better understanding of the
function of the heart in the body
A medical library was built at
Alexandria, which became the
centre of all medical knowledge
throughout the Ancient World.
Books were collected from India,
China and Mesopotamia as well
as by Greek doctors and writers.
Human dissection was also
allowed for a time at Alexandria
The Romans
(500BC - 500AD)
Built cities, villas, villages
and army forts in healthy
places near good springs,
rivers or wells
Built aqueducts to
provide fresh water
to the valleys
Built public baths
and sewers to
improve hygiene
GALEN built on four
humours by saying that if
you were too hot, for
example,, then you would
need cooling down
GALEN wrote over 350 medical books,
which were the foundation of learning
for the next 1400 years. His ideas were
accepted because they fitted with the
ideas of the Christian Chruch
GALEN worked with gladiators,
getting a better understanding
of the anatomy. He famously
demonstrated how the nervous
system worked, even though it
was on a pig
Medieval Western
Europe (500AD -
1500AD)
Catholic Church was
powerful and
returned to believe
that God caused and
cured disease
Education was
restricted to Monks
and natural ideas were
not encouraged as they
went against God and
the Church
Most knowledge
from Greeks and
Romans was lost
The Black Death, from
1347 - 1350, killed more
than 25 million people
Causes for disease were based
around the supernatural, like
praying, taking a potion, going
on a pilgrimage, and flagellate
as a punishment
Some natural cures
were used, like blood
letting, leeching, and
testing urine
Public health grew
worse, rivers were used
as dumps for sewage
and a source of
drinking water
Cauterising irons were used,
wine was used as a cleaning
agent (antiseptic). Most
surgery was carried out by
barber surgeons, but they
weren't qualified. You could
be killed if you questioned
the work of Galen
Fines were
put into place
in 1372 for
littering
Medieval Islamic
World (500AD -
1500AD)
Medicine was readily accepted
in Islam, in direct comparison
to Christianity, where new
ideas were often forbidden
Gained knowledge from
people they conquered and
books they kept
CALIPH AL-MA'MUN built House of
Wisdom where medical books
were translated written by
HIPPOCRATES and GALEN
RHAZES stressed need to carefully
observe patient but warned against
dangers of blindly following H and G.
Wrote over 100 books on medicine
IBN SINA wrote a million
word book on medicine,
containing all sorts of
treatments for all known
diseases and was used by
trainees until the 1600s
ABULCASIS translated
ideas of Paul of Aegina, a
Greek medical writer who
described how to do simple
surgery
Renaissance
(1500AD -
1700AD)
Rebirth
Printing press
helped spread new
ideas across Europe
Artists such as LEORNARDO
DA VINCI made detailed
anatomical drawings
Microscope and
telescope were invented
for close inspections
VESALIUS
Dissected human
bodies to
understand how
they worked
Proved Galen wrong by
confirming the human jawbone
was made of one bone
Published book "The Fabric
of the Human Body", which
mapped out bones, organs,
and muscles of the body
PARÉ
Used oil of roses, egg
yolks and turpentine to
treat gunshot wounds
on the battlefield as it
was less painful and
healed wounds quicker
Used ligatures
to tie up
arteries to
stop bleeding
However, he was
unaware that
infections could
easily be carried
into the blood by
ligatures
HARVEY
Demonstrated
function of heart
and how blood
flows around body
through veins and
arteries
Heart works like a
pump
Blood flows in
one direction only
around body
One way valves
stop blood flowing
the wrong way
Blood is
re-circulated and
not replaced
New
weapons -
more wounds
to heal
Edward Jenner
- Vaccination -
1796
Discovered
cure for
small pox
Carried out an experiment
on James Phipps - inserted
pus from cowpox and
inserted into the boys arm
Noticed hat milkmaids
who suffered mild
disease of cowpox never
contracted smallpox
Proved that being
inoculated with cowpox
meant James was
immune to smallpox
Ridiculed, clergy
claimed it was
repulsive and ungodly
Published his findings
and is foundation of
modern vaccines
In 1853, the government
insisted that every baby
must be vaccinated for
smallpox
Louis Pasteur
- Germ Theory -
1861
Spontaneous
Generation -
idea that disease
caused germs
Invented pasteurisation
- heating a liquid to get
rid of germs
Proved that germs were only
found in places they could
reach - the spontaneous
generation theory was dead
Published Germ Theory
in 1861 and proved it in
1865 in a silk factory
Robert Koch -
1882
Found a way of staining and
growing germ responsible for
anthrax in a Petri dish, named
after his assistant Julius Petri
Proved bacterium caused
disease by injecting mice
and making them ill
Proved germs
caused disease
in humans
Identified germs
causing anthrax, TB and
cholera
Awarded Nobel
Peace Prize for his
work
Edwin Chadwick
- Chadwick's
Report - 1842
Medical
officer for
each district
Improve
sewers and
drains
Improve drainage and
remove rubbish from
houses
Shocked
Britain
Made everyone
aware of public
health
Public
Health Act 1
- 1948
Laissez Faire (Leave alone)
attitude of government of
public health
However, the cholera
epidemic changed their
mind and they
published the Public
Health Act
National Board of Health to be
created to set committees to
improve drainage, sewers, rubbish
collections, water supplies, etc
Local boards to have powers to make
sure new houses are built with drains
and toilets, charge tax to pay for
improvements and appoint medical
officers to inspect nuisances
John Snow
- Cholera -
1854
Surgeon who worked
in Broad Street, Soho,
London
Through research, Snow
found that the victims all got
their water from the Broad
Street water pump
Snow asked permission to
remove the handle from the
water pump so people used
other water pumps
It worked! There were no
more deaths in the street
Further research showed
that a pipe had cracked at a
street toilet one metre away,
that was polluting the water
Proved cholera was
carried through
water, not air
James Simpson -
Anaesthetics -
Chloroform - 1847
Alternative to ether, which
irritated patients' eyes and
made them cough and vomit
during operations
Some argued that the long-term
side effects were unknown whilst
others put forwards their
arguments on religious grounds
Argued it was
unnatural to ease
women of pain of
childbirth
In 1857, Queen Victoria used
chloroform during the delivery of
her eighth baby. With the Queen's
support, it wasn't long before the
use of anaeatherics became
common in surgical practice
Joseph Lister -
Antiseptics - Carbolic
Acid - 1867
Used an aerosol can and sprayed
carbolic acid on anything that might
come into contact with the wound
It worked! His patients
didn't get any infections
and antiseptics were born
From 1864 to 1866, without
antiseptics, 46% of patients who had
amputations died. From 1867 to
1870, with antiseptics, only 15% of
patients who had amputations dies
However, carbolic acid
irritated the surgeon's
hands and patients
flesh and made
everything smell
Soon the whole country was
using antiseptics. Hospitals
walls were scrubbed, floors
were swept and equipment
was sterilised. Surgeons
started to wear rubber gloves,
surgical gowns and facemasks
during operations
Alexander
Fleming -
Penicillin -
1928
When Fleming went on holiday, he
left several plates of germ on a
bench. When he returned, he noticed
that the staphylococcus germs next
to the mould had been killed
Fleming realised the germ-killing abilities
of penicillin and published his findings. He
concluded that penicillin was a natural
antiseptic that killed many germs
Development
Florey and Chain applied to
government for money
(£25) to begin research
Slowly collected
enough penicillin to
trial on one human
Trialled on Albert Alexander, a
policeman, who dies a few days
later, however, it had worked
Mass
Production
In June 1941, Florey went to
America to ask for help, The US
government agreed to pay several
huge chemical companies to make
millions of gallons of it
By the end of the war,
250,000 soldiers were being
treated, and more was being
produced for the public
Impact
Officials estimated 15% of
wounded soldiers could have
died without penicillin
The antibiotic became
available for the public
and saved millions of lives
Said to have treated bronchitis,
pneumonia, syphilis, tonsillitis,
meningitis and many more
diseases
Why Did
Fewer Children
Die After 1900?
In 1906, the School Meals Act
allowed local councils to provide
school meals, with poor children
getting a free meal. By 1914,
158,000 children were having a
free school meal every day
The Children's and Young
Person's Act of 1908 stated that
parents were breaking the law if
they neglected their children
The NHS was set up in 1948
and it provides care before
the baby is even born
World
War 1
Blood Transfusions - Landsteiner
identifying blood groups made it
possible. Hustin discovered