Monday, August 19, 2019
Hippocrates, The Father Of Medicine :: essays research papers
 Hippocrates, the Father of Medicine      Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Hippocrates, greatest physician of antiquity, is regarded as the father  of medicine. Born on the island of Kos, Greece in the year 460 b.c., says the  earliest biography written by Soranus of Ephesus in the a third century a.d.  Although a native of Kos he was forced to leave the island as the result of a  fire for which he was blamed. He traveled to many other islands to practice  medicine. Most of the cases in the two books of Epidemics considered to be  genuine are located at Thasos, a small island in the North Aegean Sea, and at  Abdera, a town on the adjacent mainland; but there are also references to  Cyzicus, on the south coast of the Sea of Marmara, and to Larisa and Meliboea in  Thessaly. He died, according to tradition, in Larissa, Greece; little else is  known about him. His name is associated wioth the Hippocratic Oath, though he  probably is not the author of the document. In fact, of the approximately 70  works ascribed to him in the Hippocratic Collection, Hippocrates may actually  have written about six of them. The Hippocratic Collection probably is the  remnant of the medical library of the famous Kos school of medicine. His  teachings, sense of detachment, and ability to make direct, clinical  observations probably influenced the other authors of these works and had much  to do with freeing ancient medicine from superstition.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Among the more significant works of the Hippocratic Collection is Airs,  Waters, and Places, which, instead of ascribing diseases to divine origin,  disusses their environmental causes. It proposes that considerations such as a  town's weather drinking water, and site along the paths of favorable winds can  help a physician ascertain the general health of citizens. Three other works-  Prognostic, Coan Prognosis, and Aphorisms -advanced the then- revbolutionary  idea that, by observing enough cases, a physician can predict the course of a  disease.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  The idea of preventative medicine, first concieved in Regimen and  Regimen in Acute Diseases, sterss not only diet but also the patient's general    					    
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