Earlier European practice had combined bleeding with feeding up the
patient. In the following description of medical practice in the Goa Royal
Hospital from the 1640s, we find that the Europeans had now decided that a
scantier diet was more appropriate, as noted above in the case of the Abbé
Carré’s self-cure:

The hospital at Goa was formerly renowned throughout India; and, as it
possessed a considerable income, sick persons were very well attended to.
This was still the case when I first went to Goa; but since this hospital
has changed its managers, patients are badly treated, and many Europeans
who enter it do not leave it save to be carried to the tomb. It is but a
short time since the secret of treatment by frequent bleedings was
discovered [he presumably means in Goa, for bleeding was of course
universally practiced in Europe]; and it is repeated, according to need, up
to thirty or forty times, as long as bad blood comes, as was done to myself
on one occasion when at Surat; and as soon as the bad blood is removed,
which is like an apostume, the sick person is out of danger. Butter and
meat are to him as poison, for if he eats them he puts his life in danger.
Formerly some small ragouts were made for the convalescent, but they must
nowadays content themselves with beef-tea and a basin of rice. (Tavernier
1977: I, 160–161)

Indian practice was quite different, and was described as follows by a
French doctor in the mid-1600s.

On physic they have a great number of small books, which are rather
collections of recipes than regular treatises. The most ancient and most
esteemed is written in verse. I shall observe, by the way, that their
practice differs essentially from ours, and that it is grounded on the
following Pearson Medical Connections PORTAL, vol. 8, no. 2, July 2011. 8
acknowledged principles: a patient with a fever requires no great
nourishment; the sovereign remedy for sickness is abstinence; nothing is
worse for a sick body than meat broth, for it soon corrupts in the stomach
of one afflicted with fever; a patient should be bled only on extraordinary
occasions, and where the necessity is most obvious - as when there is
reason to apprehend a brain fever, or when an inflammation of the chest,
liver, or kidneys, has taken place. (Bernier 1914: 338– 339)

Bleeding, then, is an example of Europeans bringing a method with them to
India, and with dubious validity. More often they accepted that Indian
diseases needed Indian remedies. That some Indian diseases were different
and peculiar to the subcontinent was widely acknowledged, and not just by
Europeans. One Muslim author considered that there were major problems in
applying the Perso-Islamic Yunani (Greek) system to Indians (Ikram 1966:
183). The eccentric alchemist and important early medical innovator
Paracelsus in a book published in 1537–1538 stressed that Asian and African
prescriptions did not work in Europe, and he also was not certain that his
prescriptions would work outside Europe (Lach 1977: 424). In the late
seventeenth century a French visitor said that for local diseases European
medicines were of no use: ‘For this reason the Physitians that go out of
Portugal into these parts must at first keep company with the Indian
Surgeons to be fit to Practice; otherwise, if they go about to cure these
Distempers, so far different from ours after the European manner, they may
chance to Kill more than they Cure’ (Careri’s account in Sen 1949).

http://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/portal/article/view/1643
-- 

FN * +91-9822122436 * 784 Saligao 403511 Bardez Goa

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