But before there were modern hospitals, there were bimaristans. The word is of Persian origin and means “home for the sick.” The first bimaristans existed in medieval Islamic society and were often built by governments with money from wealthy donors. Bimaristans offered many of the things we now find in modern hospitals. Like today, patients could pay a fee to get medical services. Sometimes, they did not have to pay anything at all.
Others included the Bimaristan Al-Adudi in the 10th century and the Bimaristan Al-Mansuri in Cairo, Egypt, which thrived during the 13th century.
There was a lot going on within the walls of a bimaristan! The buildings were sometimes separated to keep male and female patients in different wings, or sections.
Some wings were divided into wards based on specialization. These included internal medicine, ophthalmology, and surgery.
Ophthalmology is a branch of medicine that studies and treats diseases of the eye.
Some bimaristans treated patients for mental illness. Many even had their own pharmacies and places to worship, such as mosques. However, bimaristans were not just for treating patients. They were also places for medical research.
Ibn al-Nafis, the head doctor at a bismaristan, wrote the first description of pulmonary circulation, the study of the flow of blood between the lungs and the heart.
Many bimaristans offered training too. Young students who wanted to become doctors went to bimaristans to learn. Within many, there were classrooms and libraries where students could study.
RECORDS SHOW THAT ONE OF THESE MOBILE BIMARISTANS WAS SO LARGE, IT NEEDED 40 CAMELS TO MOVE IT!
Bimaristans benefited many parts of medieval society. They offered medical care and treated patients’ mental health, but they also quarantined contagious patients, which helped control disease.
Training doctors encouraged the spread of knowledge, and their architecture and worship spaces contributed to Muslim culture. Today, we can begin to appreciate the many ways bimaristans influenced modern hospitals.