Immediately take him to the Hospital Emergency, if is a broken bone DO NOT TRY TO STRAIGHTEN IT OUT. Leave the bone as it is and keep it elevated at all times. I'm not a doctor, but this is by basic understanding.
Yes It would depend on which bone you broke and how.
Their treatment methods were really painful. They would try to pull the broken bone back into place. When they would feel that everything is right, they would splint the broken bone.
A brace or support to a broken bone would be a cast. When a person experiences a clean break in a bone, a doctor will apply a cast to the broken bone area. The cast allows to bone to heal properly.
If one is looking for a doctor for a broken bone they would need to go to a local emergency room or hospital, where a doctor will set the broken bone.
No
A broken bone is a fracture.
In the middle ages a broken bone would be set by a physician and put in a sling. It would be immobilized by being wound tightly with cloth. Rather than an X-ray, the physician would use feel and would assume the bone was broken by the amount of swelling. They did not have the ability today of distinguishing the various types of problems they do today but they could heal broken bones. Holding sprained ankles still would also heal them.
Osteonecrosis ( decay of a bone )
The arm is.The collar bone is mostly broken
A broken bone is a bone that has suffered stress. Such stress could lead to several types of fractures.
If X-Rays did not exist, then people would not know how severe their broken bone is, or they would not know if they have broken a bone in an injury. X-Rays are very important because they help you with your health and your bones.
what compensation will you get from a broken clavicleThe collar bone is also known as the clavicle and is the most common bone which is damaged in the human body. If your collar bone is injured in an accident ans someone is legally to blame you should be able to claim compensation. See the related link entitled "broken collar bone" to see examples of compensation amounts in the UK for various different degrees of severity of collar bone injuries.