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- W31669897 abstract "Man has encountered snakes since beginning of time. Our fascination with snakes has been manifested by their being both loathed and worshipped. This report will document progress in medical treatment of victims of pit viper envenomation over time (Table 1). I will refer to medicalization as process of a human condition progressing from one that essentially did not involve medical profession to that of a high involvement with modern clinical science. Many human conditions that we accept as having medical implications have not always been so. Two hundred years ago, childbirth was sole purview of midwives and there were practically no recognized medical aspects of this event and certainly no specialty of obstetrics. More recently, we have seen medicalization of alcoholism, drug addiction, obesity, personality disorders, and a host of environmental and occupational aspects of medicine. That man and snakes have had a stressed relationship is alluded to in Bible. It is only seventeen verses after creation of man and two verses after creation ofwoman that mankind in Garden of Eden had first encounter with the most subtle of all beasts [Genesis 3:1]. This confrontation with reptile was original sin, a mere three chapters into Bible. For every ancient representation of snakes as evil there is at least an equal depiction of snakes as highly revered. One of first cultures to do this was that of ancient Egyptians. Their principal deity, Ra, was adorned with a hoop-like device depicting a snake. The Romans used a snake in form of caduceus which was serpent-staff of Mercury. Similarly, symbol of medicine, staff ofAesculapius, consists of a snake intertwined around staff. Of interest this staff-snake motif may reflect magical staff that Moses used in wilderness in Exodus. Moses was commanded to make a poisonous serpent and set it on a pole; everyone who was bitten shall look at it" @default.
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- W31669897 date "2001-01-01" @default.
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- W31669897 title "From ETOH to FAB: the medicalization of therapy for pit viper envenomation." @default.
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