1.Florence J. Murray (慕禮理 1894–1975), a Dedicated Female Medical Missionary
Kang Hyun LEE ; Solam LEE ; Sang Baek KOH
Yonsei Medical Journal 2020;61(1):1-3
No abstract available.
Female
;
Humans
;
Missionaries
2.Albin Garfield Anderson (安道善, 1882–1971): A History of Medical Missionary Work
Yonsei Medical Journal 2019;60(5):403-406
No abstract available.
Missionaries
3.Reconsideration of Dr. Allen's Report about Hemoptysis Patients from High Prevalence of Archaeoparasitological Paragonimiasis in Korea
Min SEO ; Jong Yil CHAI ; Jong Ha HONG ; Dong Hoon SHIN
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2019;57(6):635-638
Horace N. Allen, an American physician, was a Presbyterian missionary to Korea. In 1886, he wrote the annual report of the Korean government hospital, summarizing patient statistics according to outpatient and inpatient classification for the first ever in Korean history. In the report, he speculated that hemoptysis cases of outpatient might have been mainly caused by distoma. Allen’s conjecture was noteworthy because only a few years lapsed since the first scientific report of paragonimiasis. However, he was not sure of his assumption either because it was not evidently supported by proper microscopic or post-mortem examinations. In this letter, we thus revisit his assumption with our parasitological data recently obtained from Joseon period mummies.
Autopsy
;
Classification
;
Hemoptysis
;
Humans
;
Inpatients
;
Korea
;
Missionaries
;
Mummies
;
Outpatients
;
Paragonimiasis
;
Prevalence
;
Protestantism
4.Preeminent Medical Missionary in the 20th Century: Oliver R. Avison
Yonsei Medical Journal 2018;59(1):1-3
No abstract available.
History, 19th Century
;
History, 20th Century
;
Medical Missions, Official/history
;
Missionaries
;
Religious Missions/history
5.History and Future of the Korean Medical Education System
Korean Medical Education Review 2018;20(2):65-71
Western medicine was first introduced to Korea by Christian missionaries and then by the Japanese in the late 19th century without its historical, philosophical, cultural, social, political, and economic values being communicated. Specifically, during the Japanese colonial era, only ideologically ‘degenerated’ medicine was taught to Koreans and the main orthodox stream of medicine was inaccessible. Hence, Korean medical education not only focuses on basic and clinical medicine, but also inherited hierarchical discrimination and structural violence. After Korea's liberation from Japan and the Korean war, the Korean medical education system was predominantly influenced by Americans and the Western medical education system was adopted by Korea beginning in the 1980s. During this time, ethical problems arose in Korean medical society and highlighted a need for medical humanities education to address them. For Korean medical students who are notably lacking humanistic and social culture, medical humanities education should be emphasized in the curriculum. In the Fourth Industrial Revolution, human physicians may only be distinguishable from robot physicians by ethical consciousness; consequentially, the Korean government should invest more of its public funds to develop and establish a medical humanities program in medical colleges. Such an improved medical education system in Korea is expected to foster talented physicians who are also respectable people.
Aptitude
;
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
;
Clinical Medicine
;
Consciousness
;
Curriculum
;
Discrimination (Psychology)
;
Education
;
Education, Medical
;
Ethics, Medical
;
Financial Management
;
Humanities
;
Humans
;
Japan
;
Korea
;
Korean War
;
Missionaries
;
Rivers
;
Societies, Medical
;
Students, Medical
;
Violence
6.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
7.The Study on the Lives and Health Conditions of Internees in Santo Thomas Camp of Philippines: Based on McAnlis's The War in Manila (1941–1945).
Korean Journal of Medical History 2017;26(2):265-314
When Japan invaded the Philippines, two missionary dentists (Dr. McAnlis and Dr. Boots) who were forced to leave Korea were captured and interned in the Santo Thomas camp in Manila. Japan continued to bombard and plunder the Philippines in the wake of the Pacific War following the Great East Asia policy, leading to serious inflation and material deficiency. More than 4,000 Allied citizens held in Santo Thomas camp without basic food and shelter. Santo Thomas Camp was equipped with the systems of the Japanese military medical officers and Western doctors of captivity based on the Geneva Conventions(1929). However, it was an unsanitary environment in a dense space, so it could not prevent endemic diseases such as dysentery and dengue fever. With the expansion of the war in Japan, prisoners in the Shanghai and Philippine prisons were not provided with medicines, cures and food for healing diseases. In May 1944, the Japanese military ordered the prisoners to reduce their ration. The war starting in September 1944, internees received 1000 kcal of food per day, and since January 1945, they received less than 800 kcal of food. This was the lowest level of food rationing in Japan's civilian prison camps. They suffered beriberi from malnutrition, and other endemic diseases. An averaged 24 kg was lost by adult men due to food shortages, and 10 percent of the 390 deaths were directly attributable to starvation. The doctors demanded food increases. The Japanese Military forced the prisoner to worship the emperor and doctors not to record malnourishment as the cause of death. During the period, the prisoners suffered from psychosomatic symptoms such as headache, diarrhea, acute inflammation, excessive smoking, and alcoholism also occurred. Thus, the San Thomas camp had many difficulties in terms of nutrition, hygiene and medical care. The Japanese military had unethical and careless medical practices in the absence of medicines. Dr. McAnlis and missionary doctors handled a lot of patients focusing mainly on examination, emergency treatment and provided the medical services needed by Philippines and foreigners as well as prisoners. Through out the war in the Great East Asia, the prisoners of Santo Thomas camp died of disease and starvation due to inhumane Japanese Policy. Appropriate dietary prescriptions and nutritional supplements are areas of medical care that treat patients' malnutrition and disease. It is also necessary to continue research because it is a responsibility related to the professionalism and ethics of medical professionals to urge them to observe the Geneva Convention.
Adult
;
Alcoholism
;
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
;
Beriberi
;
Cause of Death
;
Dengue
;
Dentists
;
Diarrhea
;
Dysentery
;
Emergency Treatment
;
Emigrants and Immigrants
;
Endemic Diseases
;
Ethics
;
Far East
;
Headache
;
Humans
;
Hygiene
;
Inflammation
;
Inflation, Economic
;
Japan
;
Korea
;
Male
;
Malnutrition
;
Military Personnel
;
Missionaries
;
Philippines*
;
Prescriptions
;
Prisoners
;
Prisons
;
Professionalism
;
Smoke
;
Smoking
;
Starvation
8.Past, Present, and Future of Ewha Medical Care.
Koo Young JUNG ; Sang Jin SHIN
The Ewha Medical Journal 2017;40(1):1-8
Historically, Ewha University Medical Center roots from Boguyeogwan, which was founded by missionaries in 1887 as the first women's hospital. Inheriting the spirit of missions, Ewha Medical Care (EMC) is an official missionary activity of Ewha Womans University that provide regular mission trips to offer medical services in underdeveloped countries. The first EMC trip was to Nepal in 1989 at the request of Nepalese Sakura Rajbhandary, a graduate of Ewha Womans University Medical School. Mission trips continued to Nepal from 1989 to 2001, and since 2003 mission fields were changed to Cambodia, Vietnam, and Uzbekistan. Since 2014, EMC has sent 3 mission teams to each countries, Cambodia, Vietnam, and Uzbekistan, every year. The final mission of EMC in the future is to establish a missionary hospital in the third world where medical service is in need as Boguyeogwan was established by missionaries to protect and save poor Korean women in the past.
Academic Medical Centers
;
Cambodia
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Missionaries
;
Nepal
;
Religious Missions
;
Schools, Medical
;
Uzbekistan
;
Vietnam
9.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
10.Allen (Horace N. Allen, 安連, 1858–1932).
Yonsei Medical Journal 2017;58(4):685-688
No abstract available.
Religion and Medicine
;
History of Medicine
;
History, 19th Century
;
History, 20th Century
;
Hospitals
;
Missionaries
;
Physicians
;
Diplomacy
;
Republic of Korea

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