Introduction This research module focuses on various aspects of human health, anatomy, and disease processes. It includes such human organ systems, disorder resulting from illness mechanisms and homeostasis, topics such as skin system and musculoskeletal system. The following case studies show how burn classification affects treatment, how joint injuries disrupt mobility, and how sedentary lifestyles can degrade human health I will explore.
Historian Elizabeth Lumbuk is a "hysteriaan: a good woman case", a hysterical patient in his later years, a prominent psychologist in the early 20th century. I am looking into the medical case study of E. Emerson. Emerson's case from 1913 to 1916, because Emerson is often directly writing woman's story and his own observations, use her own words to provide deep insight into the state of hysteria I will illustrate. A woman who completely stopped participation of a heterosexual, or who could not achieve the desired romantic, fertility rate, and the goal of "women's place of residence", and a woman who did not desire them. (Of course, from the eyes of Freud's psychologist like Emerson, a woman who does not want reproductive, surrender, or homosexuality is obviously sick.) The only general indicator is that it is the sexuality of Victorian women It means that it does not meet the definition.
1886 Pennsylvania Women Medical College: Anandibai Joshee (left) in India and Okami Kei (middle) in Japan, and Sabat Islambooly in Syria (right). All three completed their medical research. And each of them is the first woman to receive Western medicine status from their country. 1742: The Moravian people in Pennsylvania have established the first full-girls boarding school in the United States, the Bethlehem Feminist Seminary in America to serve Bethlehem and the nearby Moravian community. In 1863, it became a university. In 1913, it became Moravian seminary and female vocational school. Historians believe the Moravian are the oldest - but due to the current state of coeducation - especially in American women's higher education institutions they can not continue their activities
Medical research at Skoptzy At least three different groups of researchers conducted Skoptzy's medical research. At the turn of the century, Pittad measured 30 Skoptzy men in the village of Romania and pointed them to be taller than their companion (10). In 1907, Tandler and Grosz investigated five Skoptzy men in Bucharest. Average age was 30 years and was castrated between 5 and 21 years old (12). After that, when Germany occupied Romania during the First World War, Walter Koch studied 13 Skoptzy men from 50 years to 94 years (average 64 years) and was castrated for an average of 46 years. Various anthropomorphic measurements were taken and skull x-rays were obtained by several people (13).
Long-term impact of male castration: Lessons learned from Skoptzy and the unofficial from Chinese and Ottoman courts