Aesculapius
(es″kyŭ-lā′pē-ŭs)
[L. Aesculapius, fr Gr. Asklēpios]
The Latin form of Asklēpios, the ancient Greek god of medicine, son of Apollo and the nymph Coronis.
staff of Aesculapius
A rod or crude stick with a snake wound around it, signifying the art of healing and adopted as the emblem of some medical organizations, e.g., American Medical Association. Snakes were sacred to Aesculapius because they were believed to have the power to renew their youth by shedding their old skin and growing a new one.
SEE: caduceus
Citation
Venes, Donald, editor. "Aesculapius." Taber's Medical Dictionary, 24th ed., F.A. Davis Company, 2021. Nursing Central, nursing.unboundmedicine.com/nursingcentral/view/Tabers-Dictionary/738558/all/Aesculapius.
Aesculapius. In: Venes DD, ed. Taber's Medical Dictionary. F.A. Davis Company; 2021. https://nursing.unboundmedicine.com/nursingcentral/view/Tabers-Dictionary/738558/all/Aesculapius. Accessed October 10, 2024.
Aesculapius. (2021). In Venes, D. (Ed.), Taber's Medical Dictionary (24th ed.). F.A. Davis Company. https://nursing.unboundmedicine.com/nursingcentral/view/Tabers-Dictionary/738558/all/Aesculapius
Aesculapius [Internet]. In: Venes DD, editors. Taber's Medical Dictionary. F.A. Davis Company; 2021. [cited 2024 October 10]. Available from: https://nursing.unboundmedicine.com/nursingcentral/view/Tabers-Dictionary/738558/all/Aesculapius.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - ELEC
T1 - Aesculapius
ID - 738558
ED - Venes,Donald,
BT - Taber's Medical Dictionary
UR - https://nursing.unboundmedicine.com/nursingcentral/view/Tabers-Dictionary/738558/all/Aesculapius
PB - F.A. Davis Company
ET - 24
DB - Nursing Central
DP - Unbound Medicine
ER -