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Blood Basics > Early Practices
Barber-Surgeons
During the Middle Ages a new category of medical practitioner emerged. The Pope
had banned the clergy from performing bloodletting (although they were welcome to
receive it), and physicians were discouraged by the fact that feudal lords could have
them executed in cases of malpractice. So bloodletting and other minor procedures
moved into the hands of barber-surgeons. More craftsmen than medics, they
established their own guilds and competed for respectability with apothecaries and
physicians. They advertised with a symbol that endures to this day -- a red and
white striped pole. The pole represents the stick patients would grab while being
phlebotomized; the white stripes represent the bandages and the red stripes, the
blood.
-- Douglas Starr
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