Hannah Newton
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‘She sleeps well and eats an egg’
Convalescent care in early modern England

This chapter focuses on how doctors and laypeople measured the patient's growing strength after illness, and analyses the physiological processes through which this restitution was thought to occur. It shows that both the measures and the mechanisms for the restoration of strength were intimately connected to the 'six Non-Natural things': excretion, sleep, food, passions, air and exercise. Patients' sleeping patterns, appetites for foods, and emotions, along with other inclinations and behaviours that related to the Non-Naturals, were used to track their progression on 'the road to health'. The Non-Naturals played two vital functions during convalescence in early modern England. The first was prognostic: the manifestation of each Non-Natural acted as a measure of the patient's growing strength. The second role was therapeutic: the manipulation of the Non-Naturals was the chief means through which strength and flesh were restored.

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Conserving health in early modern culture

Bodies and environments in Italy and England

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