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Hospitals in the Islamic  Civilization 
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During  the Islamic civilization, hospitals had much developed and attained specific  characteristics:
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1.  Secular: Hospitals served all peoples irrespective of color, religion, or  background. They were run by the government rather than by the church, and  their Directors were commonly physicians assisted by persons who had no  religious color. In hospitals, physicians of all faiths worked together with  one aim in common: the well-being of patients.
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2.  Separate wards: Patients of different sexes occupied separate wards. Also  different diseases especially infectious ones, were allocated different wards.
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3.  Separate nurses: Male nurses were to take care of male patients, and vice  versa.
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4.  Baths and water supplies: Praying five times a day is an important pillar of  Islam. Sick or healthy, it is an Islamic obligation; of course physical  performance depends on one's health, even he can pray while laying in bed.  Before praying, washing of face, head, hands, and feet must be done, if  possible. For certain conditions, a bath is obligatory. Therefore, these hospitals  had to provide the patients and employees with plentiful water supply and with  bathing facilities.
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5.  Practicing physicians: Only qualified physicians were allowed by law to  practice medicine. In 931 A.D., the Caliph Al-Mugtadir from the Abbasid dynasty,  ordered the Chief Court-Physician Sinan Ibn-Thabit to screen the 860  physicians-of Baghdad, and only those qualified were granted license to  practice (Hamarneh 1962). The counterpart of Ibn- Tbabit, Abu-Osman Sai'd  Ibn-Yaqub was ordered to do the same in Damascus, Mecca, and Medina. The latter  two cities were in need for such an act because of hundreds of thousands of  pilgrims visiting them every year. This was to prevent taking advantage of  these pilgrims and to curb the spread of diseases among them.
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6.  Medical schools: The hospital was not only a place for treating  patients, but also for educating medical students, interchanging medical  knowledge, and developing medicine as a whole. To the main hospitals, there  were attached expensive libraries containing the most up-to-date books,  auditoria for meetings and lectures, and housing for students and house-staff.
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7. Proper  records of patients: For the first time in history, these hospitals kept  records of patients and their medical care.
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8.  Pharmacy: During the Islamic era, the science and the profession of pharmacy  had developed to an outstanding degree. The Arabic materia medica became so  rich and new drugs and compounds were introduced because the Muslims had  contact with almost all the known world at that time, either through control or  trade. Their ships sailed to China and the Philippines, and their convoys made  trades with black Africa, Europe and Asia. Chemistry became an advanced  science, and there were means and need for a specialization called pharmacy.
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Thus,  the main Arabian hospitals were models for medieval hospitals built later in  Europe. They were rather medical schools to which those seeking advanced  medical knowledge, from the East or West, attended.
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Source:
\r\n“Contributions Of Islam To Medicine\" - Ezzat Abouleish
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