A fragment of the Hippocratic oath on the 3rd-century Papyrus Oxyrhynchus, for article on Hippocratic Oath

Ancient Greek physicians set the foundations of medical ethics

Sometime in the fourth or fifth century B.C.E., an unknown author — writing in the tradition of the Greek physician Hippocrates — set down a short oath that would shape how healers understood their obligations for the next 2,500 years. It bound physicians to their patients, to their teachers, and to a code of conduct that put care before profit and protection before harm.

What the evidence shows

  • Hippocratic Oath: The oath was written between the fourth and fifth centuries B.C.E., most likely by a member of the Hippocratic school rather than Hippocrates himself — modern scholars are broadly agreed on this.
  • Medical ethics: The text established several principles that remain central to medicine today, including non-maleficence (the duty to avoid harm), patient confidentiality, and the idea that a physician’s loyalty belongs first to the patient.
  • Ancient Greek medicine: The oath is part of the Hippocratic Corpus, a collection of roughly 60 medical texts from the same tradition — but it stands apart from the others through its strongly religious and ethical tone, invoking healing gods including Apollo, Asclepius, Hygieia, and Panacea.

What the oath actually said

The original oath, written in Ancient Greek, asked physicians to swear by a pantheon of healing deities to uphold specific duties. These included passing on medical knowledge to one’s teachers and their descendants, refusing to administer poisons, and abstaining from all intentional wrongdoing toward patients — including sexual exploitation of those in the physician’s care.

The phrase most people associate with the oath — “First, do no harm” — does not actually appear in the original text. The Latin primum non nocere is a later formulation. What the original oath does say is this: “I will abstain from all intentional wrong-doing and harm.” The spirit is the same, but the precise wording that became famous came later.

The oath also contained provisions that were never universal in practice. Its prohibition on surgery — “I will not use the knife” — sits awkwardly alongside other texts in the Hippocratic Corpus that provide detailed instructions on surgical procedures. Not all ancient physicians appear to have sworn it, and those who did interpreted its terms differently across centuries and cultures.

Why it spread across civilizations

The oath’s reach across time is partly a story of adaptation. When the Byzantine Christian world adopted the text, scribes replaced its references to pagan healing gods with a Christian preamble. The underlying ethical structure — loyalty to patients, confidentiality, the refusal to harm — proved flexible enough to carry across that theological transition.

It is worth noting that the Greek tradition was never isolated. Greek physicians in this period drew on medical knowledge from Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Persia. Scholars have documented substantial Egyptian influence on Greek medical practice, particularly in diagnosis, pharmacology, and surgical technique. The ethical frameworks that emerged in this period were not a purely Greek invention but a synthesis built across centuries of Mediterranean exchange.

By the fourth century C.E., the oath had come to symbolize the medical profession broadly — appearing on the tombstones of physicians. Medical schools around the world still use versions of the oath at graduation ceremonies, though the specific language varies widely. The earliest surviving reference to the oath being invoked dates to 43 C.E., in the writings of the Roman physician Scribonius Largus.

Lasting impact

The Hippocratic Oath established something that had not existed before in writing: a formal ethical framework binding physicians to their patients as a matter of professional duty, not just personal virtue. That framing — that medicine carries obligations independent of law, religion, or custom — became foundational to how societies have organized healthcare ever since.

Modern patient safety standards, the principle of informed consent, the legal concept of medical confidentiality, and the ethical guidelines governing clinical trials all trace some of their intellectual lineage to this tradition. The Declaration of Geneva, adopted by the World Medical Association in 1948 C.E. in direct response to Nazi medical atrocities, was a deliberate modern restatement of the oath’s core commitments. In several legal jurisdictions today, violations of the oath’s principles carry criminal or civil liability — the text’s authority has moved well beyond the symbolic.

The idea that a physician’s first loyalty belongs to the patient, not to the state or to profit, remains genuinely contested in some contexts — but its survival as a live ethical question is itself a measure of the oath’s staying power.

Blindspots and limits

The oath reflects the assumptions of its time and place. Its protections applied most clearly to free male patients; the position of women, enslaved people, and the poor in ancient Greek medical practice was far less protected than the oath’s language might suggest. The oath’s provisions on abortion and euthanasia have been interpreted in contradictory ways across centuries, used to support opposing positions, and remain contested in contemporary medical ethics — which is a sign not of the oath’s strength but of its ambiguity. The record of who actually swore it, when, and with what meaning is incomplete. The oldest surviving manuscript dates to the 10th or 11th century C.E., nearly 1,500 years after the text was likely composed.

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For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Hippocratic Oath

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