1.The Introduction of Pavlovian Theory and the Change of the Medical System in China in the 1950s: Focusing on the Construction of the Protective Medical System
Korean Journal of Medical History 2020;29(2):613-372
In the 1930s, Stalin established Pavlovian theory as a socialist medical theory, criticized bourgeois science and ideology, and consolidated his dictatorship. Stalin used Pavlov's theory to emphasize the interaction between man and environment and the inheritance of acquired characteristics, trying to ensure the legitimacy of the socialist system reform in politics and society. Therefore, if the Soviet scientists and doctors did not conform to Pavlov's theory, their research would be strictly controlled, making free and creative research impossible. In the 1950s, China and North Korea, which accepted the socialist political model of the Soviet Union, also had this dogmatic tendency.
In 1950, China signed the “The Sino-Soviet Treaty of Friendship,” initiated the movement of learning from the Soviet Union in politics, economy, society, education, law, science, medical care, and other aspects, and established a socialist country based on the Soviet model. In Chinese medical circles, through the “Pavlov Learning Movement," they accepted the health care system and medical technology of the Soviet Union without any criticism, and carried out the ideological transformation of intellectuals to wipe out the influence of western capitalism. Moreover, Virchow's ‘Cellular Pathology’ and Mendel's ‘Genetics’ were denounced as reactionary bourgeoisie theory, and Pavlov's theory became a socialist medical theory based on dialectical materialism. As a result, the Communist Party of China reorganized the medical and scientific knowledge system based on Pavlov's theory, and took it as an important ideological tool to establish the socialist medical system.
In the 1950s, Chinese medical workers strengthened ideological education through the “Pavlov's learning movement,” applied this theory to clinical practice, and implemented new treatment methods such as “Sleep Therapy” and “PPM(Psychoprophylactic Painless childbirth Method).” In addition, hospitals implemented the “Protective Medical System” and established the socialist medical system. The goal of the protective medical system was to eliminate the negative stimulation which has adverse effects on the treatment of patients and to establish a patient-centered medical system. Therefore, the hospital launched a comprehensive effort to create a clean environment, eliminate all kinds of noise, cultivate a friendly working attitude, and improve nutrition. As a result, the hospital environment and the working attitude of medical staff improved and the treatment rate of diseases also improved, while the mortality rate of patients decreased.
At the same time, with the strengthening of political education for doctors, nurses and patients in hospitals, hospitals have become places to educate socialist laws and ideology. In addition, in order to prove the superiority of Pavlov's theory, medical workers carried out unscientific sleep therapy on patients, so people's body became an experimental space for of socialism. Moreover, in the implementation of PPM, women could not tell the pain of childbirth, but under medical control, they were in a contradictory situation of enduring labor pain. The Communist Party of China has established its national identity by promoting its image of “rescuer”, which liberates the patients from the pain of disease, and the “welfare” image of taking good care of the people's body. The Communist Party of China has reconstructed the metaphors of “sickness” and “labor pain”, making it an indispensable medium for the concepts of socialism, women's Liberation and medical welfare to be engraved on the people's body. Therefore, through the clinical practice of sleep therapy and PPM, we can understand how the Communist Party of China controlled the people's body, and such policies and systems demonstrate the “medical” governance mode of socialist control over the people.
2.Obstetric Medical Book and Women's Childbirth in Qing Dynasty: The Case of the Treatise on Easy Childbirth.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2015;24(1):111-162
Ye Feng composed what was to become one of the most famous and widely-circulating medical works of the late imperial period, the Treatise on Easy Childbirth(1715). Ye Feng proposed the idea of natural childbirth, When the correct moment for birth had arrived, the child would leave its mother's body as easily as "a ripe melon drops from the stem". He argued attempts to facilitate birth were therefore not only unnecessary, and female midwives artificial intervention was not required. However, this view is to overlook the pangs of childbirth, and women bear responsibility for the failure of delivery. So his views reflect the gender order in male-dominated. Also he constructed the negative image of the midwife and belittle her childbirth techniques. As a result, midwife are excluded from the childbirth field, male doctors grasp guardianship rights of the female body. Ye Feng declared that the key to safe and successful delivery could be summed up in just a few words: "sleep, endure the pain, delay approaching the birthing tub". This view must be consistent with the Confucian norms, women to export to equip the 'patience' and 'self-control'. These norms were exposed desire men want to monitor and control the female body, effect on consolidation of patriarchal family order. In sum, the discourse of "a ripe melon drops from the stem" and "sleep, endure the pain, delay approaching the birthing tub" comprised an important intellectual resource that male doctors drew on to legitimate themselves as superior overseers of women's gestational bodies.
China
;
Confucianism
;
Delivery, Obstetric/*history
;
Female
;
History, 18th Century
;
Humans
;
Midwifery/*history
;
Natural Childbirth/*history
;
Pregnancy
;
*Reference Books, Medical
3.Caroli's disease: hepatic arterial color doppler signals in the communicating dilated bile ducts.
Moon Gyu LEE ; Boo Kyung HAN ; Seong Yon BAEK ; Kyoung Sik CHO ; Yong Ho AUH ; Myung Hwan KIM ; Eun Sil YU
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 1992;28(1):124-129
Three siblings with congenital dilatation of the intrahepatic bile ducts (Caroli's disease) are presented. Bile duct pathology was associated with congenital hepatic fibrosis and polycystic renal disease in all three patients. On color Doppler imaging (CD imaingl, multiple small color Doppler signals were observed in or near the vascular radicles within the dilated bile ducts, besides other well-known sonographic findings such as bile duct dilatations, biliary calculi. Dopper frequency spectral analysis confirmed all these color Doppler signals as arterial origin in all patients, showing pulsatile wave pattern. Although portal venous radicles are well known in conventional sonograms or computed tomotraphy(CT), continuous wave patterns were not detected in all patients. In addition to previously reported sonographic findings about Caroli's disease, color Doppler signals showing arterial wave pattern in or around the portal venous radicles within dilated duets are another helpful diagnostic criteria and these findings are easily depicted on routine sonograms with color mapping.
Bile Ducts*
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Bile Ducts, Intrahepatic
;
Bile*
;
Caroli Disease*
;
Dilatation
;
Fibrosis
;
Gallstones
;
Humans
;
Pathology
;
Polycystic Kidney Diseases
;
Siblings
;
Ultrasonography
4.Early stage adrenocortical carcinoma—what contributes to poor prognosis after adrenalectomy? A retrospective cohort study
Douk KWON ; Cheong-Sil RAH ; Byung-Chang KIM ; Shin Jeong PAK ; Jae Won CHO ; Won Woong KIM ; Yu-mi LEE ; Jae Lyun LEE ; Dong Eun SONG ; Ki-Wook CHUNG ; Tae-Yon SUNG
Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research 2024;107(4):187-194
Purpose:
Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare primary carcinoma originating in the adrenal gland with a poor prognosis and a high recurrence rate. This study evaluated the risk factors associated with recurrence in patients with early stage ACC after curative surgical resection.
Methods:
The present study retrospectively evaluated the risk factors for recurrence in 38 patients with stages 1 and 2 ACC who underwent curative resection between 1995 and 2020.
Results:
Recurrence was observed in 21 patients (55.3%), with no significant difference between stages 1 and 2 ACC (P = 0.640). The overall recurrence rate was higher in patients who underwent minimally invasive surgery than open adrenalectomy (71.4% vs. 51.6%). Of the 33 patients with gross tumor margins negative for malignancy, 16 (48.5%) experienced tumor recurrence, and all 5 patients with positive and unknown gross resection margins had recurrence.Recurrences were observed in 14 of the 30 patients (46.7%) negative for pathologic resection margins, 6 of the 7 patients (85.7%) with pathologically indeterminate margins, and 1 patient with pathologically positive margins.
Conclusion
The recurrence rates are high even in patients with early stage ACC, being higher in patients who undergo minimally invasive surgery than open adrenalectomy. Obtaining clear resection margins during surgery may reduce tumor recurrence; however, gross or pathologic margin safety was not a secure factor in preventing recurrence. None of the factors analyzed was a definitive predictor of poor prognosis.
5.Early stage adrenocortical carcinoma—what contributes to poor prognosis after adrenalectomy? A retrospective cohort study
Douk KWON ; Cheong-Sil RAH ; Byung-Chang KIM ; Shin Jeong PAK ; Jae Won CHO ; Won Woong KIM ; Yu-mi LEE ; Jae Lyun LEE ; Dong Eun SONG ; Ki-Wook CHUNG ; Tae-Yon SUNG
Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research 2024;107(4):187-194
Purpose:
Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare primary carcinoma originating in the adrenal gland with a poor prognosis and a high recurrence rate. This study evaluated the risk factors associated with recurrence in patients with early stage ACC after curative surgical resection.
Methods:
The present study retrospectively evaluated the risk factors for recurrence in 38 patients with stages 1 and 2 ACC who underwent curative resection between 1995 and 2020.
Results:
Recurrence was observed in 21 patients (55.3%), with no significant difference between stages 1 and 2 ACC (P = 0.640). The overall recurrence rate was higher in patients who underwent minimally invasive surgery than open adrenalectomy (71.4% vs. 51.6%). Of the 33 patients with gross tumor margins negative for malignancy, 16 (48.5%) experienced tumor recurrence, and all 5 patients with positive and unknown gross resection margins had recurrence.Recurrences were observed in 14 of the 30 patients (46.7%) negative for pathologic resection margins, 6 of the 7 patients (85.7%) with pathologically indeterminate margins, and 1 patient with pathologically positive margins.
Conclusion
The recurrence rates are high even in patients with early stage ACC, being higher in patients who undergo minimally invasive surgery than open adrenalectomy. Obtaining clear resection margins during surgery may reduce tumor recurrence; however, gross or pathologic margin safety was not a secure factor in preventing recurrence. None of the factors analyzed was a definitive predictor of poor prognosis.
6.Early stage adrenocortical carcinoma—what contributes to poor prognosis after adrenalectomy? A retrospective cohort study
Douk KWON ; Cheong-Sil RAH ; Byung-Chang KIM ; Shin Jeong PAK ; Jae Won CHO ; Won Woong KIM ; Yu-mi LEE ; Jae Lyun LEE ; Dong Eun SONG ; Ki-Wook CHUNG ; Tae-Yon SUNG
Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research 2024;107(4):187-194
Purpose:
Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare primary carcinoma originating in the adrenal gland with a poor prognosis and a high recurrence rate. This study evaluated the risk factors associated with recurrence in patients with early stage ACC after curative surgical resection.
Methods:
The present study retrospectively evaluated the risk factors for recurrence in 38 patients with stages 1 and 2 ACC who underwent curative resection between 1995 and 2020.
Results:
Recurrence was observed in 21 patients (55.3%), with no significant difference between stages 1 and 2 ACC (P = 0.640). The overall recurrence rate was higher in patients who underwent minimally invasive surgery than open adrenalectomy (71.4% vs. 51.6%). Of the 33 patients with gross tumor margins negative for malignancy, 16 (48.5%) experienced tumor recurrence, and all 5 patients with positive and unknown gross resection margins had recurrence.Recurrences were observed in 14 of the 30 patients (46.7%) negative for pathologic resection margins, 6 of the 7 patients (85.7%) with pathologically indeterminate margins, and 1 patient with pathologically positive margins.
Conclusion
The recurrence rates are high even in patients with early stage ACC, being higher in patients who undergo minimally invasive surgery than open adrenalectomy. Obtaining clear resection margins during surgery may reduce tumor recurrence; however, gross or pathologic margin safety was not a secure factor in preventing recurrence. None of the factors analyzed was a definitive predictor of poor prognosis.
7.Early stage adrenocortical carcinoma—what contributes to poor prognosis after adrenalectomy? A retrospective cohort study
Douk KWON ; Cheong-Sil RAH ; Byung-Chang KIM ; Shin Jeong PAK ; Jae Won CHO ; Won Woong KIM ; Yu-mi LEE ; Jae Lyun LEE ; Dong Eun SONG ; Ki-Wook CHUNG ; Tae-Yon SUNG
Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research 2024;107(4):187-194
Purpose:
Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare primary carcinoma originating in the adrenal gland with a poor prognosis and a high recurrence rate. This study evaluated the risk factors associated with recurrence in patients with early stage ACC after curative surgical resection.
Methods:
The present study retrospectively evaluated the risk factors for recurrence in 38 patients with stages 1 and 2 ACC who underwent curative resection between 1995 and 2020.
Results:
Recurrence was observed in 21 patients (55.3%), with no significant difference between stages 1 and 2 ACC (P = 0.640). The overall recurrence rate was higher in patients who underwent minimally invasive surgery than open adrenalectomy (71.4% vs. 51.6%). Of the 33 patients with gross tumor margins negative for malignancy, 16 (48.5%) experienced tumor recurrence, and all 5 patients with positive and unknown gross resection margins had recurrence.Recurrences were observed in 14 of the 30 patients (46.7%) negative for pathologic resection margins, 6 of the 7 patients (85.7%) with pathologically indeterminate margins, and 1 patient with pathologically positive margins.
Conclusion
The recurrence rates are high even in patients with early stage ACC, being higher in patients who undergo minimally invasive surgery than open adrenalectomy. Obtaining clear resection margins during surgery may reduce tumor recurrence; however, gross or pathologic margin safety was not a secure factor in preventing recurrence. None of the factors analyzed was a definitive predictor of poor prognosis.