1.Historical Review of Modern Public Health Nursing.
Bong Suk LEE ; Young Ran HAN ; Sook Ja YANG
Journal of Agricultural Medicine & Community Health 2018;43(2):114-124
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study is to examine the modern history of public health(PH) and suggest a way forward for PH nursing(PHN). METHODS: This paper is a review article that derives results from literature review. RESULTS: In the period of beginning (up to 1944), PHN began as the PH Department was created in the Hygiene Bureau in 1908 and tasks about nurses were legislated. PHN was limited to infectious disease tasks and performed mostly by missionaries. In the period of foundation formation (1945 to 1961), the Republic of Korea was founded, and PH policies and tasks were defined with the establishment of the central government organization and the applicable laws. In the period of foundation establishment (1962 to 1979), the Regional PH Act was amended, and as a result, PH Centers(PHCs) spread across the country. In the period of foundation expansion (1980 to 1994), the PH referral system of PHCs, PH Units, and Primary Health Care Post was established. In the period of organization in each area (1995 to 2005), PH programs reflecting changes in disease structure and public needs for the quality of life. A regional health care plan was launched. In the period of funtion expansion (2006 to present day), Centers for support health living were established. CONCLUSIONS: In the future, PH nurses need to have a macroscopic perspective that views PH through the overall PH system, and to expand from the existing healthcare concept to the national and global healthcare one.
Communicable Diseases
;
Delivery of Health Care
;
History, Modern 1601-
;
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
;
Hygiene
;
Jurisprudence
;
Missionaries
;
Primary Health Care
;
Public Health Nursing*
;
Public Health*
;
Quality of Life
;
Referral and Consultation
;
Republic of Korea
2.Kanho Kyokwaseo (Textbook of Nursing), the First Published Korean Nursing Books.
Journal of Korean Academic Society of Nursing Education 2017;23(4):452-462
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to extend the knowledge about two volumes of Kanho Kyokwaseo (Textbook of Nursing) published in 1908 and 1910. METHODS: The books were investigated from the first to the last pages and compared with other textbooks published during the same period. RESULTS: The origin of these books was from Hubinyaoshu (Manual of Nursing) published in China in 1904. They were translated by Edmunds, a missionary nurse from America, and Chang Chai-Sun, a teacher at the first nursing school in Korea, along with inspection by Korean teachers who were fluent in English. Kanho Kyokwaseo are user-friendly textbooks in that they are written mainly in Hangul; Chinese and English are added in cases of explicating western scientific terminology and medical terminology, with notes at the top, on the left, and on the right of the page. The contents emphasize reporting and submission to supervisors and doctors. Surgical nursing occupies the largest chapter. Disinfection and hygiene, the advantages of western modern medicine, are dealt with repeatedly and importantly. CONCLUSION: Kanho Kyokwaseo was widely used as the first and only nursing textbook published before Japanese occupation and as a publication having upgraded the level of textbooks.
Americas
;
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
;
China
;
Disinfection
;
Education, Nursing
;
History, Modern 1601-
;
Humans
;
Hygiene
;
Korea
;
Missionaries
;
Nursing*
;
Occupations
;
Perioperative Nursing
;
Publications
;
Schools, Nursing
3.Lee Jungsook, a Korean Independence Activist and a Nurse during the Japanese Colonial Period.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2015;24(1):1-34
This article examines the life of Lee Jungsook, a Korean nurse, as a independence activist during the Japanese colonial period. Lee Jungsook(1896-1950) was born in Bukchung in Hamnam province. She studied at Chungshin girl's high school and worked at Severance hospital. The characteristics and culture of her educational background and work place were very important factors which influenced greatly the life of Lee Jungsook. She learned independent spirit and nationalism from Chungshin girls' high school and worked as nurse at the Severance hospital which were full of intense aspiration for Korea's independence. Many of doctors, professors and medical students were participated in the 3.1 Independence Movement. Lee Jungsook was a founding member of Hyulsungdan who tried to help the independence activists in prison and their families and worked as a main member of Korean Women's Association for Korean Independece and Kyungsung branch of the Korean Red Cross. She was sent to jail by the Japanese government for her independence activism. After being released after serving two years confinement, she worked for the Union for Women's Liberation as a founding member. Lee Joungsook was a great independence activist who had a nursing care spirit as a nurse.
Colonialism/*history
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*History of Nursing
;
History, 20th Century
;
Japan
;
Korea
4.May 18 Democratic Uprising and Experiences of Nursing Activities in the Gwangju Area.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administration 2014;20(1):82-94
PURPOSE: This study was conducted to define the experiences of nursing activities in Gwangju area during the May 18 (5 . 18) Democratic Uprising over 30 years ago. METHODS: Data were collected in 2010 and 2011 through individual in-depth interviews. Ten nurses who worked in general hospitals in the Gwangju area during the 5 . 18 Democratic Uprising were interviewed using open-ended questions. Each interview lasted about 2~3 hours. Verbatim transcripts were analyzed using Van Kaam's method of phenomenological analysis. RESULTS: Four categories emerged from the analysis: anxiety about the incident which was experienced for the first time; progress of the 5 . 18 events and relationship to participants; changes in nursing environment; retrospection and wishes related to the 5 . 18 incident. CONCLUSION: This oral history study revealed more clearly of the experiences of nursing activities in the Gwangju area during the 5 . 18 Democratic Uprising. The data may provide a basis for writing history nursing in the community, and can be a basis for guidelines covering nursing care in crisis.
Anxiety
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Gwangju*
;
History of Nursing
;
Hospitals, General
;
Methods
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Nursing Care
;
Nursing*
;
Writing
5.Changing landscape of nursing homes in Singapore: challenges in the 21st century.
Gabriel H Z WONG ; Philip L K YAP ; Weng Sun PANG
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2014;43(1):44-50
The ageing population is posing new challenges to Singapore's healthcare system. The rise of dual income and the decline of extended families, as well as an increase in age-related degenerative disorders due to increased longevity render it difficult for the family to remain the primary social safety net to care for our elderly in their own homes. Consequently, nursing homes may become increasingly relevant for resource and expertise-challenged families to cope with the burden of caring for a frail and dependent elderly. However, as the recent Nightingale Nursing Home elderly mistreatment incident attests, the standards of some have been found wanting. This paper will trace the history of nursing homes in Singapore and the evolution of government policies towards them, discuss the challenges and trade-offs of nursing home regulation, and provide suggestions for better care and governance.
Aged
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Forecasting
;
Guidelines as Topic
;
History, 20th Century
;
History, 21st Century
;
Humans
;
Nursing Homes
;
history
;
legislation & jurisprudence
;
standards
;
trends
;
Singapore
6.Women Nurses' Independence Movement during the Japanese Occupation: A Historical Research Study.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administration 2014;20(4):455-467
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to elucidate the role of Korean women nurses in the independence movement and to examine their activities during the Japanese occupation from 1910 to 1945. METHODS: Nurses studied were women nurses referred to as Ganhowon, Ganhobu, Gyeonseupganhobu, Sanpa, and Josanbu at that time. Five participants such as descendents or relatives of nurses who participated in independence movements, were selected for interview to provide oral historical materials. An historical research approach was used and all of the data were analyzed according to period, region, and pattern of the independence movement. RESULTS: Throughout the historical literature and oral historical materials, it was found that from 1914 to 1945, thirty-eight women nurses actively participated in various types of independence activities such as mass hurrah demonstrations, raise the spirit of war, red cross activities, enlightenment movement and armed struggle to encourage the public to stand up against Japanese imperialism locally and abroad. CONCLUSION: The findings indicate that women nurses, as enlightened women, endeavored to solve social issues with their autonomous volition, and these action can serve as meaningful evidence for enhancing the social status of nurses.
Arm
;
Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
;
Female
;
History of Nursing
;
Humans
;
Occupations*
;
Qualitative Research
;
Red Cross
;
Volition
7.A Historical Trends of Doctoral Nursing Education in Korea.
Kasil OH ; Young Sook PARK ; Ja Hyung LEE ; Kyong Ok OH ; Yang Heui AHN ; Jiyoung LIM
Journal of Korean Academic Society of Nursing Education 2014;20(1):93-107
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to identify historical backdrop leading to the introduction of the doctorate degree of nursing in Korea, and to explore trends of doctoral nursing education program. METHODS: The research design was a descriptive study adopting a historical approach. Documentation data were collected through web sites and mail survey. The semi-structured interviews were conducted with 6 professors who were involved in the introduction of the doctorate degree of nursing. The outcomes of doctoral nursing education program were evaluated with a total of 1,153 dissertations' titles published from 1982 to 2007. RESULTS: First introduced in Korea in 1978, doctoral nursing education program had steadily increased totaling 21 doctoral program in 2007. This resulted in a rapid increase in the number of doctoral students, but the number of faculty and the quality were not as satisfactory as expected. Many doctoral program had the missions or goals that fostered nursing scholars, theorists, and researchers, a trend that seems set to continue. The majority of dissertations utilized the experimental design (39.9%), others were qualitative design (21.6%), and survey design (19.0%). CONCLUSION: Doctoral education that is the hallmark of nursing scholarship is further elaborated in terms of academic tradition of nursing school in Korea.
Education
;
Education, Nursing*
;
Fellowships and Scholarships
;
History of Nursing
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Missions and Missionaries
;
Nursing
;
Postal Service
;
Research Design
;
Schools, Nursing
;
Social Change
8.Historical Review of Lee Keumjeon, a Pioneer in Community Health Nursing in Korea.
Journal of Korean Academy of Community Health Nursing 2013;24(1):74-86
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to show the development of community health nursing in Korea in light of the life of Lee Keumjeon (1900~1990), who devoted her life to community health nursing. METHODS: Primary and secondary sources were collected and analyzed. RESULTS: Lee could get high level education up to college courses, which was very exceptional at that time in Korea. She got nursing and midwifery education in Severance Hospital (1929) and majored in public health nursing at Toronto University (1930). Then, she worked in mother-and-child health practice for more than 10 years. She helped the Korean Nurses' Association to publish Public Health Nursing (1933) and other nursing books. After the liberation of Korea, she became a governmental official in the public health nursing field and tried to establish the national public health nursing system. During the Korean War, she devoted herself to nursing education and practice at nursing schools and hospitals. After the war, she worked as president of the Korean Nurses' Association. In 1959, Lee was given the Nightingale award. Although she retired in 1960, she continued to devote herself to the development of nursing, and published her book Public Health Nursing (1967). CONCLUSION: Lee worked from 1920s to 1960s for the development of nursing in Korea and during the period Korean nursing showed great development to national system and professional status.
Awards and Prizes
;
Community Health Nursing
;
Dental Impression Materials
;
Education, Nursing
;
History of Nursing
;
Korea
;
Korean War
;
Light
;
Midwifery
;
Public Health Nursing
;
Schools, Nursing
;
Child Health
9.An Oral History Study of Nursing Education and Nursing Activity in the Jinju Area from 1940s to 1960s.
Myun Sook JUNG ; Young EUN ; Yoon Goo NOH ; Jonghye LEE ; Hyun Ju KIM ; Ho Jin CHO
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administration 2012;18(4):357-373
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to define the experience of nursing education in the Jinju area of Gyeongsang-Namdo from the 1940s to 1960s. METHODS: An oral history study was done using personal interviews with 8 nurses who graduated in nursing in Gyeong Nam area during the period under study. RESULTS: In this study, the individual's educational background before entering the nursing school, school life, and life as a nurse after graduating from nursing school were defined. CONCLUSION: For most of the respondents, their educational background before entering nursing school was middle school. They studied very hard in poor surroundings. After graduation from a nursing school, they worked in hospitals, public health centers, midwifery centers, and schools. Half of the respondents had experience as a midwife. Their income as a midwife was relatively high at that time. They all had positive identities and lived a life devoted to the individual, society, and the nation.
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Education, Nursing
;
History of Nursing
;
Hospitals, Public
;
Humans
;
Midwifery
;
Schools, Nursing
10.Current Issues and Tasks of Genetic Cancer Nursing in Korea.
Myunghee JUN ; Kyung Sook CHOI ; Gyeyoung SHIN
Asian Oncology Nursing 2012;12(4):267-273
PURPOSE: The purpose of this review article is to introduce how the Korean Society of Genetic Nursing (KSGN) has evolved and tried to translate genomic knowledge to nursing practice, and then to suggest the future role of genetic nurses in Korea. METHODS: A literature review was performed and the current status of genetic counselling in Korea was explored. Then the educational and clinical experiences of the authors were incorporated. Finally, the main activities of Korean nursing for genetics were identified. RESULTS: Two types of genetic counsellor certification have been issued in Korea: one is issued by the Korean Society of Genetic Medicine, another by the Korean Society of Breast Cancer since June 2011. A few Korean nursing researchers have continuously performed research related to genetic nursing and undertook several research projects funded by the government since 2003. In February 2011, KSGN was established and is now trying to establish further international networks. CONCLUSION: Nursing genetic experts should be trained to integrate all specialties for genetic counselling, so they can provide holistic genetic services including ethical, legal, and social issues (ELSI).
Breast Neoplasms
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Certification
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Financial Management
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Genetic Counseling
;
Genetic Services
;
Genetics
;
Genomics
;
History of Nursing
;
Korea
;
Nursing
;
Nursing Research
;
Oncology Nursing*
;
Professional Role

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