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Diploma in History of Medicine
Focusing
on
the
key
turning
points
in
the
history
of
western
medicine
e.g.
the
advent
of
hospitals,
the
role
of
public
health,
the
rise
of
biomedical
research,
this
course
offers
insights
into
medicine’s
past,
asks
what has shaped contemporary medicine and how do people study it.
By
exploring
different
kinds
of
medicine
–
Bedside,
Library,
Hospital,
Community
and
Laboratory
–
this
course
charts
the
shape
and
content
of
the
history
of
medicine
from
the
ancient
times
to
the
present
day.
It
looks
at
the
role
of
doctors,
patients,
diseases
and
society’s
reaction
to
them
over
time
and
asks
how
medicine,
disease
and
health
have
been
motors
for
change.
The
course
encourages
its
participants
to
understand
how
contemporary
medicine
differs
from
but
is
indelibly
marked
by
its
past.
By
directed
use
of
primary
and
secondary
sources
it
introduces
participants
to
the
methods
and
tools
of
research
in
the
history
of
medicine
and
encourages
the
critical
analysis
of
differing
historical
interpretations, including the participant’s own.
Course Objectives
This
course
will
allow
you
to
develop
an
in-depth
exploration
of
health
and
healing
in
Ancient
times,
to
the
Middle
Ages,
up
to
the
Modern
period.
Sufferers
and
healers
worked
with
models
of
the
body
and
therapeutics
very
different
to
those
of
our
own
day.
But
healers
had
to
persuade
patients
of
their
skills,
sufferers
had
to
choose
amongst
a
range
of
health-care
options,
and
each
sought
meaning
in
experiences
of
illness in ways that may not be so alien to our experiences.
The
course
focuses
upon
the
organization
of
health-care,
the
transmission
of
medical
knowledge,
and
the
experiences
of
patients,
and
seeks to relate forms of healing to their social and cultural contexts.
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