Document-centered workflows can consume a lot of your time and energy, no matter if you do them regularly or only sometimes. It doesn’t have to be. In fact, it’s so easy to inject your workflows with extra productiveness and structure if you engage the right solution - DocHub. Sophisticated enough to handle any document-connected task, our platform lets you modify text, images, notes, collaborate on documents with other users, generate fillable forms from scratch or web templates, and digitally sign them. We even protect your information with industry-leading security and data protection certifications.
You can access DocHub instruments from any place or device. Enjoy spending more time on creative and strategic work, and forget about tiresome editing. Give DocHub a try right now and see your Personal Medical History workflow transform!
Hi my name is Kevin Hicks welcome to the History Squad. Now todays video is all about repairing wounds and surviving pain and surgery that kind of thing in the ancient world. Now I actually started looking at repairing wounds, surviving pain and surgery in the medieval times but it kept dragging me back and weve now gone 4,000 Years BC. Its amazing the amount of knowledge that Ive uncovered and then realization that all of this knowledge from the ancient world on pain relief and surgery was actually lost for much of the medieval period. Now Ive got a couple of uh demonstrations that well go through which can be a little bit bloody, so bit of a warning there, so without further ado lets get stuck in. So to begin with we go way back into the ancient times to the Samarians, 4,000 to 2000 BC, they lived in whats called modern day Iraq, Mesopotamia in the old days. Now the reason we know about them is because they had a form of writing, cuniform and als