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      • Medicine in 18th- and 19th-century Britain saw great change, especially following the publication of Louis Pasteur’s germ theory. This led to significant changes in surgery and better prevention of disease in the late 19th century.
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  2. Medicine in 18th- and 19th-century Britain saw great change, especially following the publication of Louis Pasteur’s germ theory. This led to significant changes in surgery and better prevention...

  3. 3 days ago · medicine. Even in the 18th century the search for a simple way of healing the sick continued. In Edinburgh the writer and lecturer John Brown expounded his view that there were only two diseases, sthenic (strong) and asthenic (weak), and two treatments, stimulant and sedative; his chief remedies were alcohol and opium.

  4. Commonly prescribed drugs included highly toxic compounds of mercury and arsenic, while naturally-occurring poisons such as hemlock and deadly nightshade were also staples of the medicine cabinet. And a volume first published in 1618, the Pharmacopoeia Londinensis, offers a fascinating and detailed insight into what used to be considered ...

  5. 3 days ago · History of medicine, the development of the prevention and treatment of disease from prehistoric times to the 21st century. Learn about medicine and surgery before 1800, the rise of scientific medicine in the 19th century, and developments in the 20th and 21st centuries.

  6. Despite considerable difficulty, nineteenth-century clinical medicine was ultimately transformed by the integration of the great discoveries of the basic sciences with the traditional foundations of medical science, that is, clinical observation and autopsy.

  7. Jan 13, 2010 · Summary. Important changes occurred in the medical profession in Britain between the late eighteenth and the middle of the nineteenth century which have earned it the title ‘ The period of medical reform ’.

  8. Demand for medical services was relatively flat in the first half of the long eighteenth century. In both the 1670s and 1730s, around half of the deceased owed debts for medical services. By the 1780s, however, 60 to 65 percent owed debts for medical services.

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