# 1469 FDC - 1972 8c Osteopathic Medicine
The American Osteopathic Association founded
Dr. Andrew Still created the practice of osteopathic medicine. Dr. Still had helped found Baker University, the first four-year university in Kansas. He also served as hospital steward during the Civil War.
Dr. Still began to look for a better way to treat patients. He looked into several alternative treatments including hydropathy, diet, bonesetting, and magnetic healing. He found that these treatments had fewer severe side effects and began to envision a new “rational medical therapy†that would center around the manipulation of the musculoskeletal system, surgery, and less dependence on drugs.Â
From these ideas, Dr. Still established what he called osteopathy, an alternative medical practice that focuses on the manipulation of muscle tissue and bones. The name comes from the Greek words osteon (bone) and pathos (sensitive to or responding to). It was Dr. Still’s belief that by treating the musculoskeletal system, doctors could treat a number of diseases and prevent them from suffering some of the severe side effects of drugs.Â
Also known as the locomotor system, the musculoskeletal system is an organ system that provides the human body with form, support, stability and movement. It is made up of bones, muscles, cartilage, tendons, ligaments, joints, and connective tissue that supports and binds the tissues and organs together.
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The American Osteopathic Association founded
Dr. Andrew Still created the practice of osteopathic medicine. Dr. Still had helped found Baker University, the first four-year university in Kansas. He also served as hospital steward during the Civil War.
Dr. Still began to look for a better way to treat patients. He looked into several alternative treatments including hydropathy, diet, bonesetting, and magnetic healing. He found that these treatments had fewer severe side effects and began to envision a new “rational medical therapy†that would center around the manipulation of the musculoskeletal system, surgery, and less dependence on drugs.Â
From these ideas, Dr. Still established what he called osteopathy, an alternative medical practice that focuses on the manipulation of muscle tissue and bones. The name comes from the Greek words osteon (bone) and pathos (sensitive to or responding to). It was Dr. Still’s belief that by treating the musculoskeletal system, doctors could treat a number of diseases and prevent them from suffering some of the severe side effects of drugs.Â
Also known as the locomotor system, the musculoskeletal system is an organ system that provides the human body with form, support, stability and movement. It is made up of bones, muscles, cartilage, tendons, ligaments, joints, and connective tissue that supports and binds the tissues and organs together.
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