Neo-Hippocratism

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Neo-Hippocratism was an influential movement and was the subject of numerous conversations and theorizations between the seventeenth and mid-nineteenth centuries. The movement saw a revival in popularity with physicians after the First World War.

holistic treatment of the patient.[2]

The popularity of neo-Hippocratism has been seen as a reaction to the growing systematisation and professionalism of medicine which some physicians saw as reductionist and failing to treat the whole person.[3] Neo-Hippocratism is described as a rational and methodical method of seeing the body as a whole. Of examining a human in their entirety and “considers all medical and or internistic therapeutic agents- psychical, dietetic, chemical , biological, and physical- and applies them according to the indications of the individual patient under severe control of the continuous diagnosis of the person.[4]

History

The expression, neo-hippocratism is said to been first coined by Arturo Castiglioni in 1926.[5] One of the movement's principal promoters was Alexander Polycleitos Cawadias (1884–1971).[6]

References

  1. ^ Fournier, Frioux, Patrick, Stephane (September 16, 2022). "The Heritage of Neo-Hippocratism in Environmental Thought (Sixteenth-Nineteenth Century)".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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