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| The Hippocratic Oath contains the Pythagorean duties of justice, secrecy, respect for teachers and solidarity with peers. The clinical and ethical basics of medical practice as well as most clinical terms used even today have their origins in Hippocrates. His contribution in clinical medicine is immense. | The Hippocratic Oath contains the Pythagorean duties of justice, secrecy, respect for teachers and solidarity with peers. The clinical and ethical basics of medical practice as well as most clinical terms used even today have their origins in Hippocrates. His contribution in clinical medicine is immense. | ||
| - | As the founder of the Methodic School, Asclepiades was the first known physician who spoke about what is known today as molecular medicine. | + | As the founder of the Methodic School, Asclepiades was the first known physician who spoke about what is known today as molecular medicine. |
| - | https:// | + | ===== History of Medicine ===== |
| - | === American Medical | + | ==== American Medical |
| + | AMA Archive 1860 History of Medicine in America p22 "It was not until 1760 that the General Assembly of New York ordained that "no person whatsoever should practice as physician or surgeon, in the city of New York, before he shall have been examined on physic and surgery, and approved of and admitted by one of His Majesty' | ||
| - | An 1845 resolution to the New York Medical | + | ===== Medical |
| - | Since its founding in 1847 the AMA has played a crucial role in the development of medicine in the United States. Here’s a look at some key historical dates: | + | ==== U.S. Medical Organizations ==== |
| + | * The [[American Medical Association]] | ||
| - | *1873* AMA Judicial Council founded to deal with medical ethical and constitutional controversies. | ||
| - | *1883* Journal of the American | + | ===== Medical |
| - | *1906* AMA publishes first American Medical Directory listing over 128,000 licensed physicians | + | ==== Evidence-Based Medicine ==== |
| + | Evidence-Based Medicine (EBM) has been described as, "the conscientious, | ||
| - | *1910* The [[Flexner Report]], Medical Education in the United States and Canada, funded by the [[Carnegie Foundation]] | + | === Pushback against EBM === |
| + | " | ||
| - | *1927* AMA Council | + | The advent of evidence based medicine was a paradigm shift intended to provide a solid scientific foundation for medicine. The validity of this new paradigm, however, depends |
| - | *1943* | + | ==== Philanthropy Directed Medicine ==== |
| - | *1950* AMA Education and Research | + | === Carnegie |
| - | *1966* AMA publishes first edition | + | Our historiographical research in this paper is based on an analysis |
| - | *1967* The United States Adopted Names (USAN) Council is established | + | By way of an introduction, |
| - | *1990* AMA Fellowship Residency Electronic Interactive Data Access System (FREIDA) describing residency programs in the United States is available in electronic form. | + | The Period Ensuing from the Flexner Report from 1910s to 1940s |
| - | *2008* Ronald M. Davis, MD, then the AMA's immediate past president, apologizes for more than a century | + | The decades following |
| - | https:// | + | ==== Flexner Report Replaces Homeopathic with Allopathic ==== |
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| + | Logically, no other outcome is possible. The ebbing vitality of [[homeopathic]] [medical] schools is a striking demonstration of the incompatibility of science and dogma. […] Science, once embraced, will conquer the whole. Homeopathy has two options: one to withdraw into the isolation in which alone any peculiar tenet can maintain itself; the other to put that tenet into the melting-pot. Historically it undoubtedly played an important part in discrediting empirical [[allopathy]]. But laboratories of physiology and pharmacology are now doing that work far more effectively than homeopathy; and they are at the same time performing a constructive task for which homeopathy, as such, is unfitted. It will be clear, then, why, when outlining a system of schools for the training of physicians on scientific lines, no specific provision is made for homeopathy. […] “A new school of [medical] practitioners has arisen,” says Dr. [William] Osler, “which cares nothing for homeopathy [...]. (The original text can be found in: Flexner, 1910 | ||
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| + | ==== Western Medicine A History of Deceit ==== | ||
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| + | The True History of Deceit Within the Rise of Western Medicine | ||
| + | The Last American Vagabond ~ Posted on March 3, 2016 ~ Author Ryan Cristián | ||
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| + | In the early years of the American empire, when there was still a free market in the medical field, there were many thriving homeopathic hospitals and medical colleges. Over a century ago the Carnegie and Rockefeller foundations decided to engineer the medical curriculum through their grants and donations to the many different medical schools they deemed could be profitable for their associated businesses. As they have done with most facets of American society, they decided that they would reform medical education in America to suit their financial desires. | ||
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| + | There were many different types of medical schools from homeopathic and herbal, to what we know today as modern western medicine. The Rockefeller and Carnegie foundations sought to patent the petrochemical medical education as the sole practice in the United States. The natural health colleges were not pushing enough chemical drugs, and those drugs were primarily owned by the Carnegies and the Rockefellers. | ||
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| + | So out came the authorized preordained [[:Flexner Report]], funded by the two foundations, | ||
| ===== Major Medical Topics ===== | ===== Major Medical Topics ===== | ||