Korean Red Cross Hospital (1905–1907): Focused on its Establishment, Management and Abolition.
10.13081/kjmh.2018.27.151
- Author:
Kyu Won LEE
1
;
Eun Kyung CHOI
Author Information
1. The Institute for Medical Humanities, Inje University, Korea.
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords:
Korean Red Cross Hospital;
Korean Red Cross;
Geneva Conventions;
Red Cross Conventions;
Korean Empire;
Neutral Diplomacy;
Resident-General;
History of Modern Medicine;
Colonization;
Modernization
- MeSH:
Academies and Institutes;
Anesthesia;
Asian Continental Ancestry Group;
Colon;
Delivery of Health Care;
Diplomacy;
Female;
History, Modern 1601-;
Humans;
Japan;
Korea;
Red Cross*;
Shoulder;
Social Change
- From:Korean Journal of Medical History
2018;27(2):151-184
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
The Korean Empire, its state sovereignty threatened by the Empire of Japan, joined the Geneva Conventions in 1903 for the purpose of neutral diplomacy and established the imperial Korean Red Cross Hospital in 1905. This hospital was a result of the effort of the Korean Empire to seek a new medical system based on the Western medicine. However, after the Russo-Japanese War, Japan interfered straightforwardly in the domestic affairs of Korea and eventually abolished the Korean Red Cross Hospital in 1907 to create Daehan Hospital under Japanese colonial rule. With newly-found historical records, this study investigates the whole process of the Korean Red Cross Hospital, which has remained unknown so far, despite its importance. From the very beginning, the Korean Red Cross Hospital was under strong influence of the Empire of Japan. The site for the hospital was chosen by a Japanese army doctor, Junryō Yoshimoto, and the construction was supervised by Rokurō Katsumata, who also later on are involved in the construction of Daehan Hospital. Moreover, all the main positions for medical treatments were held by Japanese practitioners such as Gorō Tatami and Kaneko Yano. Nevertheless, the Korean government had to shoulder the all operating costs. The office of the Korean Red Cross was relocated away from the Korean Red Cross Hospital, and the government of the Korean Empire was not willing to burden the expenses of the Hospital. Moreover, the list of employees of the Korean Red Cross and that of the Korean Red Cross Hospital were drawn up separately: the former is left only in Korea and the latter in Japan. These facts suggest that those two institutes were managed dualistically unlike any other nation, implying that this may have been a means to support the Daehan Hospital project. According to the statistics, health care services in the Korean Red Cross Hospital seems to have been carried out successfully. There had been an increase in the number of patients, and the ratio of female patients was relatively high (26.4%). Only Western medications were prescribed and surgical operations with anesthesia were performed routinely. The approach to Western medicine in Korea was changing during that period. The rise and fall of the Korean Red Cross Hospital represent the urgent situation of the Korean Empire as well as the imperialistic methodology of the Empire of Japan to use medicine as a tool for colonization. Although the transition process of medical policy by the Japanese Resident-General of Korea still remains to be fully elucidated, this paper contributes to a better understanding of the history of modern medicine in Korea.