Bệnh viện (Vietnamese Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Bệnh viện" in Vietnamese language version.

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ada.org

aha.org

ama-assn.org

archive.org

  • Hall, Daniel (tháng 12 năm 2008). “Altar and Table: A phenomenology of the surgeon-priest”. Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine. 81 (4): 193–98. PMC 2605310. PMID 19099050. Although physicians were available in varying capacities in ancient Rome and Athens, the institution of a hospital dedicated to the care of the sick was a distinctly Christian innovation rooted in the monastic virtue and practise of hospitality. Arranged around the monastery were concentric rings of buildings in which the life and work of the monastic community was ordered. The outer ring of buildings served as a hostel in which travellers were received and boarded. The inner ring served as a place where the monastic community could care for the sick, the poor and the infirm. Monks were frequently familiar with the medicine available at that time, growing medicinal plants on the monastery grounds and applying remedies as indicated. As such, many of the practicing physicians of the Middle Ages were also clergy.
  • Lovoll, Odd (1998). A Portrait of Norwegian Americans Today. U of Minnesota Press. tr. 192. ISBN 978-0-8166-2832-2.

bbc.co.uk

chw.edu.au

gmc-uk.org

kcb.vn

merriam-webster.com

nih.gov

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

  • Hall, Daniel (tháng 12 năm 2008). “Altar and Table: A phenomenology of the surgeon-priest”. Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine. 81 (4): 193–98. PMC 2605310. PMID 19099050. Although physicians were available in varying capacities in ancient Rome and Athens, the institution of a hospital dedicated to the care of the sick was a distinctly Christian innovation rooted in the monastic virtue and practise of hospitality. Arranged around the monastery were concentric rings of buildings in which the life and work of the monastic community was ordered. The outer ring of buildings served as a hostel in which travellers were received and boarded. The inner ring served as a place where the monastic community could care for the sick, the poor and the infirm. Monks were frequently familiar with the medicine available at that time, growing medicinal plants on the monastery grounds and applying remedies as indicated. As such, many of the practicing physicians of the Middle Ages were also clergy.

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

  • Hall, Daniel (tháng 12 năm 2008). “Altar and Table: A phenomenology of the surgeon-priest”. Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine. 81 (4): 193–98. PMC 2605310. PMID 19099050. Although physicians were available in varying capacities in ancient Rome and Athens, the institution of a hospital dedicated to the care of the sick was a distinctly Christian innovation rooted in the monastic virtue and practise of hospitality. Arranged around the monastery were concentric rings of buildings in which the life and work of the monastic community was ordered. The outer ring of buildings served as a hostel in which travellers were received and boarded. The inner ring served as a place where the monastic community could care for the sick, the poor and the infirm. Monks were frequently familiar with the medicine available at that time, growing medicinal plants on the monastery grounds and applying remedies as indicated. As such, many of the practicing physicians of the Middle Ages were also clergy.

petruskyaus.net

  • “Bệnh hay Bịnh” (PDF).

web.archive.org

who.int

  • “Hospitals”. World Health Organization (bằng tiếng Anh). Truy cập ngày 24 tháng 1 năm 2018.