I've always been fascinated by medicine, and the history of medicine captivates me. This book is a crash course on a little bit of everything, from ancient medicine to today.
The book begins with a discussion about various diseases and the arguments about how those diseases spread. We read about mysterious plagues, smallpox, tuberculosis, then more modern diseases, or at least diseases that now had names and that we now had more of an understanding.
Doctors are discussed next, from ancient healers to modern-day doctors, healers, midwives, and even the quacks or traveling salesmen, selling hoax medicine.
The body and anatomy was discussed next. It wasn't until relatively recently that we were able to learn about the innards and the workings of the human body. Corpses were sacred and couldn't be tampered with, unless maybe the person had been a criminal, so autopsies were almost unheard-of. Then there were the grave-robbers who sold bodies for research, and all sorts of other sketchy ways of getting their human guinea pigs. Despite that, as they learned more about the human body, medicine, of course, progressed rapidly.
The laboratory comes next. That was some interesting reading. The Germans and the French were rivals of sorts when it came to research. As different chemicals were found, different tests could be performed, different medications could be developed, and medicine seemed to know no bounds.
The discussion of therapies naturally followed, and it's here we read about the development of medication, from its early forms mostly as herbs, to opium, then to antibiotics and chemotherapy drugs.
Surgery developed at a rate somewhat even with that of the exploration and learning of anatomy. Surgery was originally done without anesthesia and was usually pretty simple. It was often limited to battlefield treatments. Innards weren't tampered with because they were unknown, and what was known was too risky to try. Then they learned more about anatomy, anesthetics were developed and methods of sanitation were improved, until surgery became more than just a job done by a barber!
The hospital was slow to develop. It originally served more as a charity for the poor and needy, a sort of homeless shelter sometimes, mostly run by religious sects and didn't really have much to do with medicine. Then they began to grow to be run by more secular organizations, funded in various ways, while the public hospitals were still financially strapped. The wealthy still had most of their medical treatments at home until relatively recently, so even up until the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, hospitals began to have more doctors, teaching hospitals developed, and they began changing into some of the behemoths we know today, not just where the wretches went, and the more well-to-do kept their distance for fear of infection.
The discussion of medicine in modern society mostly dealt with medicine and politics, the forming of medical insurance in various countries and how the role of general practitioners changed over the years, so now we have those, then doctors who don't work with patients outside of hospitals.
I know this seems pretty lengthy, but even at that, I still feel like I barely scratched the surface of some of the topics discussed in this book. It was quite interesting.