1.Transition of the blind acupuncture and massage industry and its impacts in Japan.
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2016;36(1):85-90
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			After being introduced to Japan, the Chinese acupuncture and massage therapy has changed a lot, in which the influence aroused by the blind practitioners cannot be ignored. Through analyzing the development and the transition of the blind acupuncture and massage industry in Japan, it is found that the tube needle technique, changeable acupoints concept, technical deviation and the importance on acupoints rather than meridians are still existed commonly today, which are introduced by the blind acupuncture and massage practitioners, the special group in Japan. In the process of development, the interaction with the governmental strategy has played the essential role in the consolidation of the above features.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Acupuncture
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			education
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			manpower
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Acupuncture Points
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Acupuncture Therapy
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 15th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 16th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 17th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 18th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 19th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, Ancient
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, Medieval
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Humans
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Japan
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Massage
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			manpower
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Visually Impaired Persons
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
2.Retrospect and prospect of medicinal plants cultivation in China.
Qiao-sheng GUO ; Chang-lin WANG
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2015;40(17):3391-3394
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			There is time-honored history and culture of medicinal plant cultivation in China. In the present review, the medicinal plant cultivation history in china was summarized, its current situation and question were analyzed, and the prospects of medicinal plant cultivation research were pointed out, with the purpose of accelerating the growth of medicinal plant cultivation research.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			China
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Drugs, Chinese Herbal
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			chemistry
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 15th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 16th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 17th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 18th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 19th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 20th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 21st Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, Ancient
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, Medieval
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Materia Medica
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			chemistry
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			economics
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Medicine, Chinese Traditional
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			trends
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Plants, Medicinal
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			chemistry
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			growth & development
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
3.Acupoints selection rules analysis of ancient acupuncture for urinary incontinence based on data mining technology.
Wei ZHANG ; Zhigao TAN ; Juanshu CAO ; Houwu GONG ; Zuoai QIN ; Feng ZHONG ; Yue CAO ; Yanrong WEI
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2015;35(12):1299-1303
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			Based on ancient literature of acupuncture in Canon of Chinese Medicine (4th edition), the articles regarding acupuncture for urinary incontinence were retrieved and collected to establish a database. By Weka data mining software, the multi-level association rules analysis method was applied to analyze the acupoints selection characteristics and rules of ancient acupuncture for treatment of urinary incontinence. Totally 356 articles of acupuncture for urinary incontinence were collected, involving 41 acupoints with a total frequency of 364. As a result, (1) the acupoints in the yin-meridian of hand and foot were highly valued, as the frequency of acupoints in yin-meridians was 2.6 times than that in yang-meridians, and the frequency of acupoints selected was the most in the liver meridian of foot-jueyin; (2) the acupoints in bladder meridian of foot-taiyang were also highly valued, and among three yang-meridians of foot, the frequency of acupoints in the bladder meridian of foot-taiyang was 54, accounting for 65.85% (54/82); (3) more acupoints selected were located in the lower limbs and abdomen; (4) specific acupoints in above meridians were mostly selected, presenting 73.2% (30/41) to the ratio of number and 79.4% (289/364) to the frequency, respectively; (5) Zhongji (CV 3), the front-mu point of bladder meridian, was seldom selected in the ancient acupuncture literature, which was different from modern literature reports. The results show that urinary incontinence belongs to external genitalia diseases, which should be treated from yin, indicating more yin-meridians be used and special acupoints be focused on. It is essential to focus inheritance and innovation in TCM clinical treatment, and applying data mining technology to ancient literature of acupuncture could provide classic theory basis for TCM clinical treatment.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Acupuncture Points
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Acupuncture Therapy
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			China
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Data Mining
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Databases, Bibliographic
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 15th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 16th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 17th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 18th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 19th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 20th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 21st Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, Ancient
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, Medieval
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Humans
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Medicine in Literature
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Urinary Incontinence
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			therapy
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
4.Historical Study of the Etymological Form and Translational Process of Gout (Tongfeng).
Jae Heung CHO ; Jae Young JUNG
Korean Journal of Medical History 2015;24(2):533-557
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			This study aims to address questions regarding the translation of 'gout' into 'tongfeng' in East Asia. To this end, the formation process of the origins, 'gout' from Western medicine and 'tongfeng' from Oriental medicine, and the translational process were investigated through the relevant records and literature dating from the 16th century on. Symptoms associated with gout were originally mentioned in ancient Egypt and various terminologies were used to refer to gout, such as podagra, cheiragra and gonogra. The word 'gout', which is derived from Latin, was used for the first time in the 13th century. The reason for this linguistic alteration is thought to be the need for a comprehensive term to cover the various terms for gout in symptomatic body parts, since it can occur concurrently in many joints. However, it took hundreds of years before gout was independently established as a medical term. In oriental medicine, terms describing diseases with features similar to gout include bibing, lijiefeng, baihufeng and tongfeng. Among them, the concept of 'tongfeng' has been established since the Jin and Yuan dynasties. The cause, prevention and various treatments for tongfeng were proposed throughout the Ming and Qing dynasties. The early translation of gout and tongfeng in East Asia, respectively, is estimated to have occurred in the 18th century. The first literature translating gout in China was 'An English and Chinese Vocabulary in the Court Dialect (yinghua yunfu lijie)'. From the publication of this book until the late 19th century, gout was translated into an unfamiliar Chinese character 'Jiu feng jiao', likely because the translation was done mostly by foreign missionaries at the time, and they created a new word on the basis of Western medicine instead of researching and translating similar diseases in oriental medicine. In Japan, the first book translating gout was 'A Pocket Dictionary of the English and Japanese Language (Eiwa taiyaku shuchin jisho)', Japan's the first English-Japanese translation dictionary. In this book, gout was translated into tongfeng, a word adopted from oriental medicine. These differences from China are thought to be caused by Rangaku doctors, who, influenced by oriental medicine in the Jin and Yuan dynasties, played an important role in translating medical terminology at that time.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			China
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Gout/*history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 15th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 16th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 17th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 18th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 19th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, Ancient
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, Medieval
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Japan
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Medicine, East Asian Traditional/*history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			*Terminology as Topic
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Translating
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
5.The Lives and Diseases of Females during the Latter Half of the Joseon Dynasty as Reconstructed with Cases in Yeoksi Manpil (Stray Notes with Experienced Tests).
Korean Journal of Medical History 2015;24(2):497-532
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			Through the cases of approximately 80 females in the case records of traditional physician Yi Sugwi (1664-1740?), the present study divided and reclassified the lives and diseases of females during the latter half of the Joseon Dynasty into childhood, obstetrics- and gynecology-related problems in adulthood, other diseases in adulthood, and old age and analyzed them. According to the results, female children were treated less preciously than were male children so that treatments by traditional physicians were sought out less when they were ill than in the case of male children, and acute infectious diseases were the most serious health problems. In the process of receiving treatment from traditional physicians as adults, females came in contact with traditional physicians, who were male, when necessary including face-to-face sessions and the reception of pulse examination but the yangban (literati-official) class practiced sex segregation as much as possible while the lower classes were considerably free from such restrictions. For female adults, the most serious health issues were pregnancy and childbirth so that they received help from traditional physicians and midwives when there were problems. Traditional physicians determined females' pregnancy and the health of fetuses and pregnant women through pulse examinations and medication and actively responded to diverse problems that surfaced in the process with medication and other treatments. Acute infectious diseases, too, were serious diseases suffered by females, and problems involving cold damage and the digestive system were among diseases frequently suffered by females in adulthood and old age. In old age, females often became ill in the arduous process of dealing with the deaths of adult descendants, siblings, and spouses, and tumors were among the major causes of their deaths. The deaths of those aged 70 or above were accepted as quite natural. Aged females endeavored to maintain their health and played the role of elders giving care to their descendants.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Adolescent
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Adult
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Aged
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Child
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Child, Preschool
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Communicable Diseases/etiology/*history/therapy
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Delivery, Obstetric/*history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Female
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Gynecology/*history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 17th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 18th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Humans
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Infant
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Infant, Newborn
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Korea
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Middle Aged
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Obstetrics/*history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Young Adult
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
6.The Seongho School's Study of the Ancient Learning and Its Influence on the Debate about Materia Medica in the Late Joseon Dynasty.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2015;24(2):457-496
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			This study will determine the ways in which the ancient learning (gu xue) scholarship of the Seongho School, and its interest in the materia medica (ben cao xue) were related during the late Joseon period. The Seongho School centered its studies mainly on classical Chinese texts of the Han (206 BC-AD 220) and pre-Han (?-221 BC) (xian-qin liang-han) periods rather than those of the Tang and Song dynasties (618-1279). Gu xue scholarship emerged during the Ming dynasty era (1368-1644) as an alternative to the scholarly trends of the Song dynasty, which were dependent on Zhu Xi's (1130-1200) Neo-Confucianism and its interpretation of Han and pre-Han classical Chinese texts. This scholarly trend influenced Korean and Japanese literature, philosophy, and even medicine from the seventeenth through the nineteenth centuries. Focusing on Korean scholarship, we find a great deal of research regarding the influence of gu xue on Korean classical Chinese literature and Confucian philosophy in the late Joseon period; however, no study has examined how this style of scholarship influenced the field of medicine during the same period. This study will investigate how the intellectuals of the Seongho School, who did the most to develop gu xue among Joseon intellectuals, were influenced by this style of scholarship in their study of the materia medica. Jeong Yak-yong (1762-1836), the representative intellectual of the Seongho School, did not focus on complicated metaphysical medical theories, such as the Yin-Yang and Five Elements theory (yin yang wu xing shui) or the Five Movements and Six Atmospheres theory (wu yun liu qi shui). Instead, his interests lay in the exact diagnoses of diseases and meticulous herbal prescriptions which formed an essential part of the Treatise on Exogenous Febrile Disease (Shang han lun) written by Zhang Zhungjing (150-219) in the Han dynasty. The Treatise was compatible with the scholarly purpose of gu xue in that they both eschewed metaphysical explanations. The Seongho School's interest in the materia medica stemmed from a desire to improve the delivery and quality of medical practices in rural communities, where metaphysical theories of medicine did not prevail and the cost of medicine was prohibitive.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Delivery of Health Care
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 18th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 19th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Korea
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Materia Medica/*history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Medicine, Chinese Traditional/*history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Medicine, Korean Traditional/*history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Physicians/*history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Quality of Health Care
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
7.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
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
8.Control Discourses and Power Relations of Yellow Fever: Philadelphia in 1793.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2014;23(3):513-541
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			1793 Yellow fever in Philadelphia was the most severe epidemics in the late 18th century in the United States. More than 10% of the population in the city died and many people fled to other cities. The cause of yellow fever in the United States had close relationship with slaves and sugar in Philadelphia. Sugarcane plantation had needed many labors to produce sugar and lots of Africans had to move to America as slaves. In this process, Aedes aegypti, the vector of yellow fever had migrated to America and the circumstances of ships or cities provided appropriate conditions for its breeding. In this period, the cause of yellow fever could not be established exactly, so suggestions of doctors became entangled in political and intellectual discourses in American society. There was a critical conflict between Jeffersonian Republicanism and Federalism about the origin and treatment of yellow fever. Benjamin Rush, a Jeffersonian Republican, suggested urban sanitation reform and bloodletting. He believed the infectious disease happened because of unsanitary city condition, so he thought the United States could be a healthy nation by improvement of the public health and sanitation. He would like to cope with national crisis and develop American society on the basis of republicanism. While Rush suggested the improvement of public health and sanitation, the city government of Philadelphia suggested isolation of yellow fever patients and quarantine. City government isolated the patients from healthy people and it reconstructed space of hospital. Also, it built orphanages to take care of children who lost their parents during the epidemic and implemented power to control people put in the state of exception. Of course, city government tried to protect the city and nation by quarantine of every ship to Philadelphia. Control policies of yellow fever in 1793 showed different conflicts and interactions. Through the yellow fever, Jeffersonian Republicanism and Federalism had conflicted in politically, but they had interactions for control of the infectious disease. And with these kinds of infectious diseases policies, we can see interactions in local, national and global level.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Government Regulation/*history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Health Policy/*history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 18th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Humans
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Philadelphia
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			*Politics
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Yellow Fever/epidemiology/etiology/*history/*prevention & control
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
9.Historico-philosophical consideration on the social role of French doctor: medical anthropology of Pierre-Jean-Georges Cabanis (1757-1808) and the French code of medical deontology.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2014;57(2):104-113
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			Doctor's task cannot be limited to medical practice and research. As a citizen of society, and above all as a professional, doctors should not evade their social responsibilities. This idea was systematically developed and widely diffused throughout Europe by Pierre-Jean-Georges Cabanis (1757-1808). He was not only a doctor, but also a philosopher and a politician who lived at the time of the French Revolution. His philosophy on the nature of medicine and the social role of the doctor is conceptualized in his idea of medical anthropology (science de l'homme, anthropologie). In order to understand why the social role of the doctor was particularly emphasized in and around France, Cabanis' medical anthropology should be analyzed in depth. His medical anthropology is composed of three major domains: physiology, ethics, and analysis of ideologies. The following ideas of his medical anthropology can be identified in the current articles of the French code of medical deontology. 1) Health and disease being a social problem, a social solution should be sought (1.6, 1.7, 1.10, 2.37, 2.44, 2.50); 2) Medical practice is in principle not a commercial service for profit, but rather a public service supported by the government's power (1.12, 1.19, 1.21, 2.55, 3.57, 3.67); 3) Doctors should maintain their professional autonomy by establishing and observing the principles of self-regulation (1.1, 1.5, 1.31, 2.50, 5.109, 5.110). Referring to the historical experience of French doctors, the Korean medical community should also enter into a broad and fundamental reflection on the nature of medicine and the social role of the doctor.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Anthropology, Medical*
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Ethics
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Europe
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			France
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			French Revolution
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Philosophy
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Physiology
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Professional Autonomy
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Social Problems
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Social Responsibility
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
10.Periodization of international spread of acupuncture-moxibustion and their characteristics at each period.
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2014;34(11):1141-1143
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			The history of international spread of Chinese acupuncture and moxibustion is divided into three sta ges in this paper, and the spreading characteristics are analyzed. The first stage is approximately from the 6th century to the end of the 15th century, during which acupuncture and moxibustion were spread to neighboring countries by personnel exchanges; the spread towards Korean peninsula, Japan and Vietnam was considered the most successful communication. The second stage lasts from the beginning of 16th century to 1970. At the early time of this stage, the employees of the Dutch East Indian Company introduced acupuncture and moxibustion to European countries through Indonesia and Japan, leading to a short and small fashion; also the United States and Australia were involved. At the late time of this stage, by medical aid teams dispatched by China government, acupuncture and moxibustion were introduced to African countries. The third stage starts from 1971. With the establishment of Sino-US diplomatic relations as an opportunity, acupuncture and moxibustion were being spread rapidly to the world through radio, TV and internet. So far it has been introduced to more than 140 countries and areas. Performing serious studies on the spreading characteristics of three stages will promote the international communication of acupuncture and moxibustion, by which the world will have a better understanding onthe broad and profound traditional cultures of China.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Acupuncture Therapy
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			China
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Europe
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 15th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 16th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 17th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 18th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 19th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, 20th Century
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, Ancient
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			History, Medieval
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Humans
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Internationality
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Japan
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Moxibustion
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			history
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			United States
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
            
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