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we think of medicine, we imagine the hospital or doctor's office, sterile
spaces, and pills that make us feel better. But, thousands of years ago,
medicine looked somewhat different.
Prehistoric
medicine refers to medicine before humans were able to read and write. It
covers a vast period and varies, according to regions of the world and
cultures.
Anthropologists study the history of humanity and have yet to discover
exactly how people practiced medicine in prehistoric times. However, they can
make guesses based on human remains and artifacts that they find and on the way
of life we see in some remote communities today.
We can be fairly sure, however, that people in prehistoric times would
have believed in a combination of natural and supernatural causes and
treatments for conditions and diseases.
Medical research
Prehistoric burial practices suggest that people knew something about human bone structure thousands of years ago.
Trial and error would have played a role in medicine in prehistory, but
there was no research, as such.
People did not compare new or existing treatments with a placebo or control when carrying out experiments, and
they did not take into account factors such as coincidence, lifestyle, and
family history.
Nobody knows precisely what prehistoric peoples knew about how the human
body works, but we can base some guesses on limited evidence that
anthropologists have found.
Prehistoric burial practices, for example, suggest that people knew
something about bone structure. Scientists have found bones that
were stripped of the flesh, bleached, and piled together, according to what
part of the body they came from.
There is also archeological evidence that
some prehistoric communities practiced cannibalism. These people must have
known about the inner organs and where there is most lean tissue or fat in the
human body.
Most likely, prehistoric people believed that spirits determined their
lives. Some people around the world today still consider illness as losing or
compromising one's soul.
Colonists found that people in Australia were able to stitch up wounds and
encase broken bones in mud to set them right. Medical historians believe these
skills probably existed in prehistory.
Most of the evidence that archeologists have found in prehistoric graves
shows healthy but badly set bones. This indicates that people in most
communities did not know how to set broken bones.
Disease prevention
Some of the priorities of public health today are:
·
preventing
the spread of disease
·
following
good hygiene practices
·
providing
clean water for people to keep themselves, their animals, and their homes clean
In contrast, medical historians are fairly sure that prehistoric peoples
had no concept of public health. Instead, individuals tended to move around a
lot and did not remain in one place for long, so the idea of a public health
infrastructure was probably not relevant.
Throughout prehistory, people had health problems, just as we do today.
However, because they had different lifestyles and lifespans, the diseases
would have varied from those we have now.
Types of disease
Below are some diseases and conditions that may have been common in
prehistoric times:
Osteoarthritis: Many people had to
lift and carry large and heavy objects frequently. This might have put a strain
on the knee joints because archeological remains suggest that osteoarthritis
was common.
Micro-fractures of the spine and spondylolysis:
These conditions that affect the vertebrae could have resulted from dragging
large rocks over long distances.
Hyperextension and torque of the lower back:
The transportation and raising of large boulders and stones, such as huge Latte
Stones, could have caused these problems.
Infections and complications: People
lived as hunter-gatherers, and cuts, bruises, and bone
fractures probably occurred frequently. There were no antibiotics, vaccines, or antiseptics, and people probably
knew little about bacteria, viruses, fungi, or other potential pathogens.
They were probably unaware of how good hygiene practices can prevent
infections and their complications. As a result, infections were more likely to
become serious and life-threatening, and contagious diseases may have spread
rapidly and become epidemics.
Rickets: Anthropologists have
evidence that rickets was widespread throughout most prehistoric
communities, probably due to low vitamin D or C levels.
Environmental exposure: There was
little protection from natural disasters, such as cold periods lasting 10 years
or longer, droughts, floods, and diseases that destroyed large food sources.
Sex: Men lived longer than women,
probably because males were the hunters. They would have had access to their
kills before the women, and so, possibly less chance of malnutrition. Also, mortality associated with childbirth
shortened the average lifespan of women.
Life expectancy
It is difficult to assess life expectancy in prehistoric times. However,
archaeologists who have studied remains of adults from two prehistoric eras
note that remains of those aged 20 to 40 yearsare more common than those aged over 40 years.
This suggests that most people did not live to be over 40 years old,
although this would depend on when and where the person lived.
Medications
Rosemary is a medicinal herb that people may have used since prehistoric times.
People used medicinal herbs in prehistoric times, say anthropologists.
There is some limited evidence that they used herbs and substances from
natural sources as medicines.
However, it is hard to be sure what the full range might have been because
plants rot rapidly.
We can speculate that many medicinal herbs or plants would have been local
ones, although this was not necessarily always the case. Nomadic tribes
traveled long distances and may have had access to a wider range of materials.
Medicinal plants
There is some evidence from
present-day archeological sites in Iraq that people used mallow and yarrow
about 60,000 years ago.
Yarrow (Achillea
millefolium): This is said to be an astringent, a diaphoretic, an
aromatic, and a stimulant.
An astringent causes tissues to contract and so helps reduce bleeding.
People probably applied astringents to wounds, cuts, and abrasions.
A diaphoretic promotes sweating and is a mild aromatic. It may also have
anti-inflammatory, anti-ulcer, and antipathogenic properties, among others.
Nowadays, people still use yarrow around the world to treat wounds,
respiratory infections, digestive problems, skin conditions, and liver disease.
Mallow (Malva neglecta):
People may have prepared this as an herbal infusion for its colon-cleansing
properties.
Rosemary Rosmarinus officinalis:
There is evidence from several areas of the world that people used rosemary as
a medicinal herb. Globally, people attribute many different medicinal qualities
to rosemary. As a result, it is hard to be sure what they used it for in
ancient times.
Birch Polypore (Piptoporus betulinus): Birch is common in the European
Alps, and people may have used it as a laxative. Archeologists found traces of
birch in a mummified man. Botanists say the plant can cause diarrhea when swallowed.
Women would have gathered and administered herbal remedies, and they were
probably in charge of treating sickness and keeping their families healthy.
As people did not read or write in those days, people would have passed
down their knowledge of the benefits and harm of various herbs they used for
medicines by word-of-mouth.
Procedures and practices
Three practices that are no longer common in medicine are geophagy,
trepanning, and shamanism.
Geophagy
This practice refers to eating soil-like or earthy substances, such as
chalk and clay. Animals and humans have done this for hundreds of thousands of
years. In Western and industrialized societies geophagy is related to an eating
disorder known as pica.
Prehistoric humans probably had their first medicinal experiences through
eating earth and clays.
They may have copied animals, observing how some clays had healing
qualities, when animals ingested them.
Similarly, some clays are useful for treating wounds. In some communities
around the world, people still use clay externally and internally to heal cuts
and wounds.
Trepanning
In prehistoric times, trepanning was a medical procedure.
This practice
involves treating health problems by drilling a hole into the
human skull.
There is evidence that humans have been boring holes into people's heads
since Neolithic times to try to cure diseases or free the victim of demons and
evil spirits.
From studying cave paintings, anthropologists believe that prehistoric
peoples used trepanning in an attempt to rid their fellows of mental disorders, migraines, and epileptic seizures.
The individual, if they survived, may have kept the extracted bone as a
good luck charm.
There is also evidence that trepanning was used in prehistoric times to
treat fractured skulls.
The medicine man
or shaman
Medicine men, also known as witch doctors or shamans, existed in some
prehistoric communities. They were in charge of their tribe's health and
gathered plant-based medications, mainly herbs and roots, carried out
rudimentary surgery, and cast spells and charms.
Tribespeople would also seek out a shaman for medical advice when they
needed it for sickness, injury, or disease.
Takeaway
The health challenges in prehistoric times were somewhat different from
those that exist today, although a number of diseases and conditions remain
common now, such as arthritis and back problems.
While people no longer have holes drilled in their skulls to free them
from demons, herbs such as rosemary still play a role in herbal medicine and
aromatherapy.
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