Black death and its impact on medieval social medicine Black death (also known as "plague" or "plague", its bacteria become Yersinia) is a devastating epidemic, and more than three points One of the death toll in Europe is 1348-1349 in its main wave. Yersinia Pestis has two major stocks. The first is a Bubon type carried by rodent fleas and causing lymphadenopathy or "inguinal lymphadenitis" and subcutaneous lesions with a mortality rate of 50%. The second is a type of pneumonia that causes airborne transmission after bacterial mutation, causes moisture accumulation in the lungs and other parts, resulting in suffocation and 70% mortality.
Medical infrastructure, medieval doctors have limited knowledge. Medieval doctors did not know what was the cause of a sick illness or a disease that plagues medieval times. In the Middle Ages, it was destroyed by British black death disease (1348 - 1350), almost one - third of Britons died. Medieval doctors are helpless. The underlying cause of many diseases is the lack of hygiene. However, medieval doctors began establishing this relationship until the outbreak of Black Death. Medieval doctors do not know what is the cause of black death - the best way they can offer is to bleed or manage herbs. There was no antibiotic in the Middle Ages, and it was almost impossible to heal diseases and diseases without it.
What are the short-term and long-term effects of black death in medieval society? Black death is one of the most deadly diseases in human history, and in Europe peaked from 1348 to 1350. As a result of this illness, half of Europe's population was eliminated, short-term and long-term effects had a major impact on the structure of medieval society. People known as black death or other plague began in Central Asia, the Central Asia region spread along the Silk Road and eventually spread to Europe.
Since the subsequent pest epidemic has wiped out all trends in population growth, the sharp decline in the European population has become a permanent and characteristic feature of the late Middle Ages. It inevitably had a tremendous influence on the European society and had a great influence on the change and development from the Middle Ages to the Early Modern era. The turning point of history, and the deaths of blacks of 1346-53, a huge human tragedy, are unparalleled in human history.