The treatment of scrofula in Ferrara (Italy) in the 19th century

Pharm Hist (Lond). 2012 Jun;42(2):26-32.

Abstract

The therapeutic approaches used against scrofula in the 19th Century in Ferrara are discussed. In the manuscripts and treatises of the time treasured in the town's libraries, hygienic and dietetic rules and treatment of this illness were described. In particular, baths and mineral water spas (sulphurous, ferruginous and other mineral waters, such as a bromo-iodine-salt water) and the sea-bathing establishment were recommended. The remedies reported in Campana's Pharmacopoeia ferrarese and the efficacious treatments employed in St Anna Hospital are discussed. The Committee and its President, Marquis Giovanni Manfredini, decided to cure the scrofulous in bathing establishments.

Publication types

  • Historical Article

MeSH terms

  • Balneology / history*
  • History, 19th Century
  • Humans
  • Italy
  • King's Evil / history*
  • Mineral Waters / history*
  • Mineral Waters / therapeutic use
  • Pharmacopoeias as Topic / history*
  • Public Health / history

Substances

  • Mineral Waters