[19th-century medical treatment of childhood diseases]

Anna Marek

Journal Article: Medycyna nowozytna: studia nad historia medycyny / Polska Akademia Nauk, Instytut Historii Nauki 02/2007; 14(1-2):69-82.

Abstract

In the 19th century, illnesses, including those of children, were treated at home. That pertained to urban as well as rural children alike. In the impoverished Polish countryside, medical treatment was largely confined to the folk-medicine practices that had been passed down from one generation to another. In rural villages and small towns, where doctors of medicine were few and far between, the parents of sick children would seek the help of folk healers or simply older women who made use of various herbal remedies. Such treatment was of a symptom-relieving nature and therefore affected the young patient's entire system. Children were also treated in their homes and family circles in cities. One can even distinguish a characteristic form of therapy which might be referred to as home medicine. It made use of a variety of therapeutic methods carried out in a domestic setting by physicians or parents. Usually those methods were based on traditional folk superstitions, additionally bolstered by rational premises. Generally accessible means, not only herbs but also diets, hydrotherapy, blood-letting and pharmacological preparations were used to treat sick children at home.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

19th century
 
characteristic form
 
children
 
family circles
 
folk healers
 
folk-medicine practices
 
hydrotherapy
 
impoverished Polish countryside
 
medical treatment
 
older women
 
parents
 
rational premises
 
rural children
 
rural villages
 
sick children
 
small towns
 
symptom-relieving nature
 
traditional folk superstitions
 
various herbal remedies
 
young patient's entire system