Cards (4)

  • women:
    • were not paid for as they were often family members
    • gave advice to sick people
    • carried out childbirth
    • conducted bleeding and purging and sometimes herbal remedies
    • had no formal qualifications - gained knowledge from experience and passed it on
    • very accessible as they were often family
  • physicians:
    • very expensive
    • diagnosed illnesses and recommended treatment
    • did not treat people, left this to women or apothecaries
    • spent 7-10 years studying medicine at university but learning was based on inaccurate theories
    • were not accessible as they were often available to rich and royalty
  • apothecaries:
    • paid for but were cheaper than physicians
    • mixed remedies together which had been prescribed
    • sometimes prescribed poison which goes against fundemental beliefs that healthcare workers should only help patients
    • gained knowledge which was passed down by ancestors
    • knowledge sometimes came from Materia Medica
    • widely available to buy treatments from
  • surgeons:
    • paid for but cost would depend on treatment
    • some were untrained - would bleed patients or do minor surgeries and pulling teeth
    • some were trained - would remove limbs or cut cataracts from eye
    • some were unqualified but people went to them beacuse they had sharp knives and a steady hand
    • others studied in European universities and were very qualified
    • untrained surgeons were widely available