Reviews
Patients and Healers is a substantial piece of scholarship, worthy of careful study for anyone interested the subject. Its focus on the perceptions and motives of the patient with emphasis on inscriptions and ex-voto dedications distinguishes this book from other general studies on health care under the Empire.
A comprehensive study of the medical market and the interactions between patients and healers in the Roman Empire.
Israelowich's book best succeeds in clearly and methodically drawing out the structure of a medical world in which many of the basic tenets of medicine were still being debated, and in including in his discussion all of the healing institutions that functioned together in the Roman world, be they religious, traditional, or philosophical.
... [T]his is a good piece of work which will continue to raise important questions and deserves a wide readership.
An original, innovative, and provocative history of ancient medicine in the High Roman Empire from the patient's point of view. Israelowich combines different materials—medical writings, papyri, inscriptions, juridical and literary texts, and archaeological sources—into a fascinating mosaic.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. The Identity of Physicians during the High Roman Empire
The Establishment of Medicine as a Profession in Rome
The Nature of the Medical Market Place during the High Roman
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. The Identity of Physicians during the High Roman Empire
The Establishment of Medicine as a Profession in Rome
The Nature of the Medical Market Place during the High Roman Empire
The Case of Psasnis
Conclusion
2. Patients' Understanding of Health and Illness
Patients and Their Healers
Physicians and Temple Medicine
Aelius Aristides
Conclusion
3. The Domus and Reproduction
Childbirth
Physicians and Midwives
Mothers' Experiences
Conclusion
4. Health Care in the Roman Army
Theoretical Background
The Establishment of the Roman Imperial Medical Corps
The Responsibilities of the Army Physician and of the Medical Corps
Military Physicians and Local Populations
Conclusion
5. Medical Tourism during the High Roman Empire
Temples
Water
Cities
Conclusion
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index