Fundamentals of Treatment Planning. Lino Calvani

Fundamentals of Treatment Planning - Lino Calvani


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in the distant past, people had absolutely no idea what they were doing when treating physical disease and illness.1-4 But once in a while, a gifted individual with a ‘beautiful mind’ sensed something new, and in this way our knowledge was carried a step or two forward. Slowly there developed the understanding and acknowledgment that the causes of illness and disease were not so much ‘divine’ as they were natural or human-made, and this understanding was the route to healing them. Of course, the first medical treatments were simple natural herbal remedies, primitive bandages and cream prototypes, coupled with attempts of a philosophical or religious nature to explain and justify all incomprehensible events by relating them to the will of a moody God.5-7

      An important aspect of the renaissance of medical science was the contribution scientists made to laying the anatomical foundations for the understanding of the cause-and-effect relationship that exists in the human body, and how the various parts of the body function and malfunction in relation to each other. This had profound implications for the development of clinical and surgical therapies. This cause-and-effect relationship can be seen as the initial basis for the current treatment planning rationale. Nevertheless, despite all efforts, ignorance about medicine among the general public was rife because society was disconnected and disorganized, and it was difficult and often impossible to teach and impart new medical knowledge and trends. At that time, medical treatment planning was largely unknown, and to the extent that it did exist, it was very primitive and poorly understood. Therefore, due to almost no true medical understanding, epidemics, traumas, infections, and cancers indiscriminately killed hundreds of millions of people. It took other two centuries before anatomy, physiology, and pathology became actual sciences, and the word ‘treatment’ became a medical term.

      Only during the 17th and 18th centuries did physicists and chemists boost the curiosity of many people, so that people started to believe that they could follow in the footsteps of these scientists in all scientific matters, driven by their then brand-new practice of scientific research methods and the pursuit of evidence of reality theories. This indirectly contributed to the speeding up of the understanding of medical science and treatment planning. Indeed, probably without realizing it, physicists and chemists at that time were changing the way people thought about medical science.

      While the 20th century gifted us with geniuses such as Albert Einstein (1879–1955), it also plagued us with two devastating world wars, which had a significant influence on the development of treatment planning in the west. About 20 million lives were lost in the First World War (1914–1918), and about 68 million in the Second World War (1939–1945). Apart from the death toll, war means all kinds of terrible injuries, physical and psychologic, created by all types of weapons. It means traumas, wounds, burns, disfigurements, and epidemics.

      The world wars profoundly changed the lives of our grandparents and parents, and forced medical science to find surgical, clinical, and pharmacological solutions to address the sudden, terrible, and urgent traumas they caused. The wide range of injuries and infections, many of them never seen before, meant that the understanding about how to plan the treatment of patients accelerated,


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