loimology
English
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editFrom Ancient Greek λοιμός (loimós) + -ology.
Noun
editloimology (uncountable)
- (obsolete, rare, medicine) Synonym of epidemiology (“the study of infectious diseases”)
- 1802, W. Tooke, The Life of Catharine II, Empress of All the Russias[1], volume 2:
- M. Vien, secretary of the college of medicine, published a very complete Loimology.
- 1914, The Year Book of Drug Therapy[2], volume 8:
- The loimology of the future had for its object to discover what places and what times were favorable to each epidemic disease and what unfavorable, either continuously or for a time […]
- 2006, Susan Gross Solomon, Doing Medicine Together: Germany and Russia Between the Wars[3]:
- Zeiss also elaborated on the connections between the collection of live cultures and his own epidemiological theories, especially his notions of geomedicine and loimology.