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Children's Surgery
The history of medicine and surgery is well documented, but this volume offers the first specific exploration of the treatment of and attitudes towards children with injuries and birth defects through the ages. Popular thought holds that children in ancient times with birth defects faced a short life of abandonment or neglect. Examination of written records from ancient Egypt, India, Greece, and Islam, however, shows that physicians and surgeons have attempted to find remedies to cure ailing youths from the beginning of recorded medical history. These essays document the origins of children's surgery, chronicle the history of children's surgery into modern times, and explore the treatment of the most common visceral birth defects. With contributing authors offering perspectives from a variety of cultures, this extraordinary collection will interest not only medical professionals, but also historians and others in the child care field.
| ISBN-13 | 9780786490486 |
| ISBN-10 | 0786490489 |
| Publisher | McFarland |
| Publication Date | January 2014 |
| Pages | 348 |
| Language | en |
| Format | Hardcover |
Expert Analysis & Insights
In-depth editorial assessment across key dimensions
Serves as a reference for historical data on pediatric surgery across cultures and eras.
Valuable for libraries, historians, and professionals referencing medical history.
Comprehensive historical coverage across multiple civilizations, from ancient to modern times.
For readers seeking a broad historical overview, not detailed monographs.
Compiles diverse historical sources on pediatric surgery, valuable for academic research in medical history.
Ideal for researchers in medical history or comparative pediatric care studies.
Enhances learning of pediatric surgery's historical context and treatment evolution.
Best for learners interested in medical history, not for skill acquisition.
Fills a niche in curriculum for history of medicine, offering cultural perspectives.
Useful as supplemental reading in medical humanities or history courses for trainees.