People in Medicine and Treatment
1350-present day
- Created by: Beth Sawyer
- Created on: 22-04-10 18:01
Medicine and Treatment
Famous and important people
1350 - The Present Day
1350 - 1750 (M. Ages - Renaissance)
Hippocrates: 1350 - 1750 (M. Ages - Renaissance)
Most important for:
- The Four Humours
- Blood
- Yellow bile
- Phlegm
- Black bile
Other Details:
- Ancient Greek
- the 'Father of Medicine'
- medical traditions - clinical observation
- he was the idea behind the 'Hippocratic Oath'
- wrote medical books
Galen
Cladius Galen (AD.129)
Most Important for:
- his influence on medical treatment for the next 1000 years.
Other Details:
- his 'theory of opposites'
- wrote 350 medical texts
- dissected pigs
- bloodletting
Lady Grace Mildmay
Lady Grace Mildmay:
Most important for:
- her herbal remedies offered to the poor and the records
Other details:
- she kept records of recipes for her remedies
- she was a wealthy land owner
- shows what women could do in the M. Ages
Vesalius
Andreas Vesalius (1514 - 1564):
Most important for:
- proved Galen's ideas to be wrong, published drawings on human anatomy
Other Details:
- dissected corpses
- muscles connected to bone
- most complete work on the human anatomy
- used drugs - mercury, sulphur
- doctors opposed
William Harvey
William Harvey (1578 - 1657):
Most important for:
- discovered how the heart works
Other Details:
- the heart:
- pump
- not used up
- veins and arteries
- wrote books
- how much blood in the body
- no microscope - capillaries (no proof)
Pare
Amboise Pare (1510 - 1590):
Most important for:
- cauterizing with out heat - egg yolk mix and silk stitches
Other Details:
- surgeon to 4 kings of France
- made discoveries public
- bezoar stone theory wrong
- stitches infected - death
- public demonstrations
1750 - 1900 (Industrial Revolution)
Hunter Brothers: 1750 - 1900 (Industrial Revolution)
Most important:
- studied anatomy and discovered arthritis and its problems
Other details:
- Glaswegian
- William - doctor
- John - not qualified
- they had a scientific approach to surgery
Edward Jenner
Edward Jenner:
Most important for:
- Vaccination for Smallpox 1796
Other Details:
- inoculation - v. better method
- luck / chance (milk maids)
- the 'James Phipps' experiment
- Opposition:
- doctors
- church and public (superstition)
- inoculators
- Support from the government
- funding
- laws passed
Louis Pasteur
Louis Pasteur:
Most important for:
- the Germ Theory of Disease, pasteurization
Other details:
- proved how vaccines work
- boiling liquids to remove germs
- vaccinations for:
- fowl cholera
- anthrax
- rabies
- influenced others
Robert Koch
Robert Koch:
Most important for:
- aseptic surgery - no germs present
Other details:
- used new technology
- vaccine serums on solid substances (transport)
- inspired others
- Nobel Prize
- the 'founder of modern bacteriology'
Paul Erlich
Paul Erlich:
Most important for:
- chemotherapy
Other Details:
- Interested: chemicals could stain germs - could they kill?
- salverson 606 - 'The Magic Bullet'
- could fight flu and pneumonia
- painful
- arsenic based
Florence Nightingale
Florence Nightingale:
Most important for:
- her effect on nursing during the Crimean War
Other details:
- St Thomas' Hospital London - 1871
- spaced out wards, good air circulation
- friendly and well trained nurses
- Scutari hospital in the Crimea
- 'The Lady with the Lamp'
- nothing for the WH infirmaries
- ignored Mary Seacole - racist
- rich, friends in high places
Mary Seacole
Mary Seacole:
Most important for:
- her involvement with nursing in the Crimean War
Other Details:
- knowledge of tropical treatments
- succeeded despite racial prejudices
- opened the British Hotel
Elizabeth Garret Anderson
Elizabeth Garret Anderson:
Most important for:
- the first British woman to qualify as a doctor
Other Details:
- met Elizabeth Blackwell - inspired by her
- turned down at British Uni's
- M.D degree - University of Paris 1870
- 1876 act of Parliament: women allowed to enter all medical professions
1900 - 2010
Alexander Fleming:
Most important for:
- Discover of Penicillin
Other Details:
- doctor WW1
- prof. of Bacteriology at St Mary's
- researched protecting people from infection in wounds
- dish left by open window = mould grown + germs stopped
- germ killing juice called penicillin
- tested on animals
- no facilities or money to produce enough
- wrote up findings
Florey and Chain
Florey and Chain:
Most important for:
- mass production of penicillin and the first antibiotic
Other details:
- read flemings paper
- could produce pure penicillin
- needed money so went to US
- saved millions in WW2
- Nobel Prizes
- mass production achieved
Watson and Crick
Watson and Crick:
Most important for:
- discovered the structure of DNA
Other details:
- great scientists - tried other methods
- didn't work alone
- had the best equipment
- funded by the government and industries
Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin
R Franklin:
Most important for:
- showed there was a mistake in Crick and Watson's model
- took the first picture of DNA
M Wilkins:
Most important for:
- expert in X-ray photography
- discovered the Double Helix structure
- showed Crick and Watson Franklin's work
David Lloyd George
David Lloyd George:
Most important for:
- National Insurance Act 1911 and the Liberal Reforms 1906-14
Other Details:
- PM of the UK
- helped to start the Welfare State with the Liberal Reforms
- introduced the People's Budget (higher taxes on the rich)
William Beverage
William Beverage:
Most important for:
- The Beverage report and the Welfare state 1942
Other Details:
- his report proposes a 'Free NHS'
- 'Cradle to the Grave'
- 5 Wants of the Nation:
- Ignorance
- Squalor
- Social needs
- Disease
- Idleness
Aneurin Bevan
Aneurin Bevan:
Most important for:
- Minister of Health and housing and the NHS
Other Details:
- took over all responsibilities for medical services
- gave free medicine and treatment to all
- helped with rebuilding houses after the Blitz
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