'The Romans' withdrawal from Britain was a turning point in the development of medicine and public health.' How far do you agree with this statement? (16 marks)
Description
Mind map for judgement question on the affect the Romans leaving had on Britain's public health and medicine developments.
'The Romans' withdrawal from Britain was a
turning point in the development of medicine and
public health.' How far do you agree with this
statement? (16 marks)
For the better
Had to develop our own ideas without the
help + investment of the Romans
Pushed us to take medicine
and public health more
seriously
This was one of the Romans' legacies
to us
Let us develop our own ideas without being
oppressed by famous Roman + Greek doctors
We then learnt from our own mistakes and
took more of an interest in the subject
British doctors could now learn from doctors from all over the world,
they weren't just restricted to Rome + the Roman Empire
For the worse
We no longer had the Roman investment into our country and this meant that we had to fund ourselves
Therefore there was less investment in medicine + public health and more into 'more important' things such as the military
No longer had the Roman passion for public health + medicine driving
us to care about it
A lot of the Roman army doctors were forced to leave along with the
army leaving us with a shortage of doctors
The Romans greatly improved our public
health + medicine- who knows how much/
long they could have continued with this?
The Romans may have brought us up to date with
public health + medicine, but now they were simply
oppressing us and stopping us from making
improvements ourselves, believing that we were
incapable of such a thing.