
BY: Francesca Bezzone
Medicine in Rome was at once incredibly different and incredibly close to what it is today. Different, of course, because of what 2,000 years of discoveries and research gave us; but similar, because some of our ancestors’ intuitions – which they, to be fair, largely inherited from the Greeks and the Egyptians – are the same upon which modern medicine was founded.
The Romans had doctors and medicines, surgeons, and even family physicians: according to sources, in 229 BC the State had bought an office for a Greek doctor named Archagathus, had and awarded him Roman citizenship immediately so that he could begin practicing straight away. Archagatus didn’t pay any rent on the rooms he practiced in, a clear sign that his work was subsidized by the Roman State: his duty was to provide its citizens with medical care.
SOURCE: https://italoamericano.org
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