Sims 4 nipples and vagina to basegame skin
In the United States, however, law and many health insurance plans allow gynaecologists to provide primary care in addition to aspects of their own specialty. If their condition requires training, knowledge, surgical procedure, or equipment unavailable to the GP, the patient is then referred to a gynaecologist. In some countries, women must first see a general practitioner (GP also known as a family practitioner (FP)) prior to seeing a gynaecologist. Modern gynaecology no longer uses such a position. This 1822 drawing by Jacques-Pierre Maygrier shows a "compromise" procedure, in which the physician is kneeling before the woman but cannot see her genitalia. The historic taboo associated with the examination of female genitalia has long inhibited the science of gynaecology. In 1855 Sims went on to found the Woman's Hospital in New York, the first hospital specifically for female disorders. Physicians and students lost interest in assisting Sims over the course of his backyard practice, and he recruited other enslaved women, who were healing from their own surgeries, to assist him. Due to having so many enslaved women, he would rotate from one to another, continuously trying to perfect the repair of their fistulas. On one of the women, named Anarcha, he performed 30 surgeries without anesthesia. While performing these surgeries he invited men physicians and students to watch invasive and painful procedures while the women were exposed. Sims performed surgeries on 12 enslaved women in his homemade backyard hospital for four years. Now criticized for his practices, Sims developed some of his techniques by operating on slaves, many of whom were not given anaesthesia. Marion Sims is widely considered the father of modern gynaecology. He was the chief representative of the school of physicians known as the " Methodists". The gynaecological treatise Gynaikeia by Soranus of Ephesus (1st/2nd century AD) is extant (together with a 6th-century Latin paraphrase by Muscio, a physician of the same school).
Aristotle is another strong source for medical texts from the 4th century BC with his descriptions of biology primarily found in History of Animals, Parts of Animals, Generation of Animals. The Hippocratic Corpus contains several gynaecological treatises dating to the 5th/4th centuries BC. Texts of Ayurveda, an Indian traditional medical system, also provides details about concepts and techniques related to gynaecology. The womb is at times seen as the source of complaints manifesting themselves in other body parts. Treatments are non surgical, comprising applying medicines to the affected body part or swallowing them. The text is divided into thirty-four sections, each section dealing with a specific problem and containing diagnosis and treatment no prognosis is suggested. gynaecological diseases, fertility, pregnancy, contraception, etc.
The Kahun Gynaecological Papyrus, dated to about 1800 BC, deals with women's health The word "gynaecology" comes from the oblique stem (γυναικ-) of the Greek word γυνή ( gyne) semantically attached to "woman", and -logia, with the semantic attachment "study".