(460 B.C.-377 B.C.)
Hippocrates was a famous Greek physician who is widely known as the "Father of Medicine." Although little is known about his life, a few facts are considered accurate.
Hippocrates was born on the Greek island of Cos around 460 b.c. to a family of physicians. Cos was the site of one of the great medical schools of ancient Greece, and Hippocrates taught there for many years. He alsotraveled widely, lecturing in Greece and probably throughout the ancient Mideast. He was well known in his lifetime and died around 377 b.c. in Larissa.
The Hippocratic approach to medicine, expressed in the books, emphasized thatdisease arose from natural causes, not from whims of the gods. Hippocrates insisted on careful observation of medical conditions; the books contain dozens of detailed clinical descriptions of diseases. He recommended as little interference as possible with the body's own ability to heal. Treatment focusedon diet, rest, and cleanliness. He advanced the doctrine of the four humors,whereby disease was supposed to result from an imbalance among the body's four important fluids.
Hippocrates also emphasized a high ethical standard for physicians. The Hippocratic Oath is a statement of medical ethics. Developed over 2,000 years ago,it probably reflects the views of Hippocrates while not actually having beenwritten by him. The oath pledges a physician to serve only the benefit of the patient, and to keep confidential anything he or she sees or hears in the course of treatment. Many medical students today still take a form of the Hippocratic Oath when they receive their medical degrees.
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