1 of 47

Slide Notes

DownloadGo Live

The History of Health Care

Published on Jan 22, 2016

No Description

PRESENTATION OUTLINE

The History of Health Care

Primitive Times

4000 BC-3000 BC

Untitled Slide

  • Prevention of injury from predators
  • Illness/disease caused by supernatural spirits
  • Tribal witch doctors treated illness
  • Trephining used to treat insanity, epilepsey and headache
  • Average life span 20 years

Herbs and plants used at medicine

  • Digitalis from foxglove plants (slow heart)
  • Quinine from cinchona tree (fever, muscle spasms, malaria)
  • Belladonna from nightshade plant (muscle spasms, GI)
  • Morphine from opium poppy (severe pain)

Egyptians

3000 BC-300 BC

Untitled Slide

  • Earliest to keep accurate health records
  • Superstitious
  • Called upon gods
  • Identified certain diseases
  • Pharaohs kepts many specialists

Untitled Slide

  • Imhotep may have been first physician
  • Priests were doctors
  • Temples were places of worship, medical schools, & hospitals
  • Only priests could read medical knowledge from the gods

Untitled Slide

  • magicians were also healers
  • believed demons caused disease
  • prescriptions were written on papyrus
  • bloodletting or leeches used to "open" "clogged" channels

Untitled Slide

  • embalming done by priests. Must have advanced knowledge of anatomy. Strong antiseptics used to prevent decay, gauze similar to today's surgical gauze

Untitled Slide

  • research on mummies revealed the existence of diseases. Arthritis, kidney stones, arteriosclerosis.

Untitled Slide

  • some medical practices still used today: enemas, circucision (4000 BC) preceded marriage, closing wounds, setting fractures

Jewish Medicine

  • Avoided medical practice
  • concentrated on health rules concerning food, cleanliness, and quarantine
  • Moses: banned quackery (God only physician), enforced day of rest

Greek

1200 BC-200 BC

Untitled Slide

  • First to study causes of diseases
  • Believed illness was a result of natural causes
  • Research helped eliminate superstitions
  • Sanitary practices were associated with the spread of disease (diet & cleanliness)
  • Average life span 25-35 years

Father of Medicine

  • Hippocrates:
  • no dissection, observation
  • notes of S&S
  • disease was not caused by supernatural forces
  • wrote standards of ethics which is the basis for medical ethics today

caduceus

  • staff and serpent
  • symbol for medicine
  • temples built in Aesculapius' honor for his first clinics

Roman

753 BC-410 AD

Untitled Slide

  • Average life span 25-35 years
  • learned from the Greeks and developed a sanitation system:aqueducts and sewers
  • Beginning of public health

Untitled Slide

  • first to organize medical care
  • Army medicine
  • Room in doctors' house became first hospital
  • later hospitals were in monasteries
  • Public hygiene: flood control, solid construction of homes

Claudius Galen

  • Physician
  • Body was 4 humors: blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile
  • An imbalance of the humors resulted in sickness

Dark Ages

400-800 AD

Untitled Slide

  • Emphasis placed on saving the soul, study of medicine prohibited
  • Prayer and divine intervention used for Tx
  • Medicine practiced only in convents and monasteries (monks & priests)
  • custodial care
  • life and death in God's hands
  • Average life span 20-30 years

Middle Ages

800-1400 AD

Terrible Epidemics

  • Bubonic plague (Black Death: killed 3/4 pop in Europe & Asia
  • Small Pox
  • Diphtheria
  • Syphilis
  • Measels
  • Thyphoid Fever
  • Tuberculosis

Untitled Slide

  • Renewed interest in medical practice of Greeks & Romans
  • Physicians began to gain knowledge from medical universities
  • Arab physicians used their knowledge of chemistry to advance pharmacology
  • Average life span 20-35 years

Renaissance Medicine

1350-1650 AD

Untitled Slide

  • Rebirth of science of medicine
  • Universities and medical schools for research
  • dissection
  • book publishing

Untitled Slide

  • first anatomy book was published by Andreas Vesalius (1514-1564)
  • Artist Michelangelo & Leonardo de Vinci used dissection to draw the human body more realistically
  • Average life span 30-40 years

16th & 17th Century

Untitled Slide

  • causes of disease were still not known
  • Ambrose Pare: Father of modern surgery
  • Gabriel Fallopius: identified fallopian tubes
  • William harvey: described circulation of blood
  • Anton van Leeuwenhoek: invented microscope

Untitled Slide

  • Bartholomeo Eustachio: identified eustachian tube
  • Apothecaries (early pharmacist) made, prescribed and sold medications
  • Some quackery
  • Average life span 35-45 years

18th century

Untitled Slide

  • Gabriel Fahrenheit: first mercury thermometer
  • Joseph Priestley: discovered oxygen
  • John Hunter: English surgeon, feeding tube
  • Benjamin Franklin: invented bifocals

Untitled Slide

  • James lind: lime juice to prevent scurvy
  • Edward Jenner: small pox vaccination
  • Average life span 40-50 years

19th century

Untitled Slide

  • French barbers acted as surgeons extracting teeth, using leeches for Tx and giving enemas
  • First successful blood transfusion 1818
  • Rene Laennac invented stethoscope
  • Florence Nightingale received formal training
  • Anesthesia discovered: nitrous oxide, ether, choloroform

Untitled Slide

  • Ignaz Semmelweiss; identified the cause of puerperal fever which led to the importance of hand washing
  • Louis Pasteus (1860-1895): discovered that microorganisms cause disease (germ theory
  • Jpseph Lister: first doctor to use antiseptic during surgery
  • Ernest von Bergman: developed asepsis

Untitled Slide

  • Wilhelm Roentgen: discovered x-rays
  • Paul Ehrlick: discoved effect of medicine on disease causing microorganisms
  • Robert Koch: Father of Microbiology, identified germ causing TB
  • Clara Barton: founded Red Cross in 1881
  • Average life span 40-60 years

20th Century

1901- 2000

Untitled Slide

  • Health insurance plans and social reforms developed in the 1920s
  • Kidney dialysis machine
  • Birth control pills approved by FDA 1960
  • First liver, lung, heart transplants
  • Sheep was cloned in 1997
  • Average life span 60-70 years

Untitled Slide

  • Sir Alexander Fleming: discovered penicillin
  • Jonas Salk: developed the polio vaccine

1900-1945

  • Acute infectious diseases ( diphtheria, TB, rheumatic fever)
  • No antibiotics, DDT for mosquitoes, rest for TB, water sanitation to help stop spread of typhoid fever, diphtheria vaccination
  • Hospitals were places to die
  • Most doctors were general practitioners

1945-1975

  • Immunization common
  • antibiotic cures
  • safer surgery
  • transplants
  • incresed lifespan
  • chronic degenerative diseases

Untitled Slide

  • new health standards: obesity, neurosis, lung cancer, hypertension
  • disintegrating families
  • greatly increasing medical costs

1975 to Present

  • Artificial parts
  • Bioengineering
  • cloning
  • Bioethical Issues
  • AIDS
  • Drug Resistant Organisms
  • Laser Surgeries
  • Manage Health Care

21st Century

Potential

Untitled Slide

  • Cures for AIDS, cancer and heart disease
  • Genetic Manipulation to prevent inherited diseases is common practice
  • Development of methods to slow the aging process
  • Nerves in the brain are regenerated to eliminate paralysis
  • Transplants of every organ in the body
  • Antibiotics that do not form resistance
  • Average life span 90-100 years