Hippocrates Perception Of Medicine

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Before Hippocrates, the perception of medicine was very different, as medicine was closely related to religion. In Greek mythology, there were deities and heroes who possessed the art of healing and practiced primitive forms of medicine. Greeks believed that Gods sent disease and provoked death, and disease could be healed by propitiation, “the action of appeasing Gods through sacrifices and rituals.” There were many gods identified with disease and injury, the most prominent being Asclepius, the god of medicine. Most Greek towns had created a temple to pray to Asclepius, and the chosen ones would pray to the gods in return for good health. This perception of medicine influenced Hippocrates, a physician who was born on the island of Chios in …show more content…

Hippocrates realised that prayers were useless against illnesses such as the plague, and disease was not caused by the gods. Instead, disease was caused by environmental factors. He applied Empedocles', a Greek philosopher, idea that “the four elements in nature: earth, air, fire, water correlated with the four humors of man: phlegm, blood, yellow bile, and black bile” and produced a pattern that was believed to hold an explanation for disease. He believed that precise balance of the four humors called pepsis would result in good health and that disease reflected an imbalance. Hippocrates said that the physician sought evidence that one of the four humors-blood, phlegm, black bile, yellow bile-was dominant in the system that was the cause of the disease. For example, winter colds were due to excess in phlegm, and mania resulted from excess bile in the brain. By changing the understanding of the four humors, Hippocrates was able to be the first person to believe that diseases were caused …show more content…

Physical diagnosis was the determination of disease by external examination of the body. It was based upon close attention to observation, and Hippocrates constantly advised Greek physicians to observe their patients meticulously. The concept of a prognosis was also developed by Hippocrates, by which a physician could predict the course and outcome of a disease based upon previous observation of similar cases. The skill of forming a prognosis had an important function in society. By foretelling the future of a disease process, physicians gathered confidence and trust from their patients and were elevated in status above traditional

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