In
hospitals built in the Medieval Muslim society male nurses tended to male patients and female nurses to female patients. Historically, female nurses during the
era of slavery in the Muslim world were often slaves, a tradition which continued in Saudi Arabia until the abolition of
slavery in Saudi Arabia in 1962, where nursing was considered a dishonorable profession. The hospital in
Al-Qayrawan (Kairouan in English) was especially unique among Muslim hospitals for several reasons. Built in 830 by the order of the Prince
Ziyadat Allah I of Ifriqiya (817–838), the Al-Dimnah Hospital, constructed in the Dimnah region close to the great mosque of Al Qayrawan, was quite ahead of its time. It had the innovation of having a
waiting area for visitors, not to mention that the first official female nurses were hired from
Sudan to work in this hospital. Moreover, aside from regular physicians working there, a group of religious
imams who also practiced medicine, called
Fugaha al-Badan, provided service as well, likely by tending the patients’ spiritual needs. ==References==