Research Article Open
Access
Journal of Media & Management
History of Medicine and Medical Law
Mukhitdinova Firyuza Abdurashidovna
J Media Managem, 2019
Doctor of Law, Professor of Tashkent State University of Law, Uzbekistan
Abstract
The article discusses the history of the development of traditional medicine and the human right to treatment. The ancestors of folk
medicine and the legal regulations in this area are studied. The state of medical activity and medical law of Uzbekistan is analyzed.
Corresponding author:
Mukhitdinova
Firyuza Abdurashidovna, Doctor of Law, Professor of Tashkent State University
of Law, Uzbekistan. E-mail: feruza.mukhitdinova@gmail.com
Received:
November: 10, 2019,
Accepted:
November: 19, 2019,
Published: November 29, 2019
Keywords: Traditional Medicine, Doctor,
Scientists, Sources, Law, Law Management
Introduction
As we know, the World Health Organization (WHO)
as early as 1948 formulated that “health is a state of
complete physical, spiritual
and social well-being, and
not just the absence of diseases and physical defects.”
WHO has proclaimed the principle that “the enjoy-
ment of the highest attainable standard of health is
one of the fundamental rights of every person”. At the
beginning
of the Middle Ages, the main agricultur-
al population of Central Asia was the ancestors of the
peoples now inhabiting the Central Asian republics:
Uzbeks, Turkmens, Kara-Kalpaks (Khorezmians and
Turkic-speaking tribes and peoples living in the regions
of Tashkent and Bukhara), Tajiks (Bactrians, Sogd-
nians and relatives and nationalities).
The culture of
these peoples was distinguished by a high level. Long
before the beginning of our era, the farmers of Central
Asia learned to draw channels for irrigation of fields
and created flowering fertile oases.
The ancestors of
the peoples of Central Asia built large cities with large
buildings, surrounded the city with strong walls, and
built dams. Various crafts were developed in the cities.