民国医学教育家李宗恩

民国医学教育家李宗恩

民国医学教育家李宗恩

Wei-Hua Lee

16,87 €
IVA incluido
Disponible
Editorial:
Asian American Today
Año de edición:
2018
Materia
Historia de Asia
ISBN:
9781942038047
16,87 €
IVA incluido
Disponible

Selecciona una librería:

  • Librería Samer Atenea
  • Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
  • Kálamo Books
  • Librería Perelló (Valencia)
  • Librería Elías (Asturias)
  • Donde los libros
  • Librería Kolima (Madrid)
  • Librería Proteo (Málaga)

One of the great narratives of the last century is the rise of China on the world stage.  The advance of medical sciences has played a pivotal role in this process, through vastly improving the health of China’s people.  This achievement was facilitated by the many Chinese medical educators who brought western medicine to their homeland in the early 1900s and educated thousands of Chinese youth to be medical doctors in the Nationalist era. To this date, almost all published material about the history of the development western medicine in China focused on a particular time period, specific medical fields, or certain medical institutes. But also of vital importance were the people who worked to make it happen.  Without their extraordinary efforts, the development of Western medicine in China couldn’t have been sustained though the tumultuous periods of war and the complicated politics leading to the establishment of the People’s Republic of China in 1949. Dr. Chung Un Lee is one of those Chinese medical educators who played an important role.  He started working in the Department of Medicine at PUMC in 1923, after he finished his medical training in England.  Over the next fourteen years he rose from an Assistant in Medicine to the rank of Associate Professor.  In 1937, when the war broke out between China and Japan, Dr. Lee left PUMC for Southwest China and founded the National Kweiyang Medical College to contribute to the resistance effort.  Over those eight difficult years, he helped educate thousands of doctors, nurses, and health professionals who later became the foundation of medical education and the health care system in southwest China.  Because of his integrity and experience, Dr. Lee was selected by the PUMC Trustees to be their new Director on March 12, 1947, and took the lead in reopening PUMC after the war.  With financial support from the China Medical Board, he reorganized faculties, staffs, and students during the difficult post-war chaos.  PUMC was reopened in October of 1948, and quickly returned its academic standards back towards pre-war levels.Dr. Lee’s career was abruptly interrupted after 1949 and he was labelled a “Rightest” by the communists in 1957 and demoted to Yunnan Province where he died in 1962.  Since that time, his name and his accomplishments were purposefully forgotten.  Very few at PUMC today have even heard of Dr. Chung Un Lee, president for 10 of its 100 year history and the first one who was Chinese.  There is little information about the reopening of PUMC in 1947, which has rebuilt its foundation to become the best medical school in China today.  These facts have never been recorded, partly because studying the original archives and published materials requires a dedicated scholar who is well versed in English and Chinese and also has an excellent knowledge of medicine.  This is a daunting task.  As time passes on, it becomes more urgent to document these important records of the development of medical education at this pivotal turning point in Chinese history.

Artículos relacionados

  • Understanding Aikido
    Jan J Sunderlin
    Understanding Aikido: Essential Information and Perceptions (Special Edition) presents an historical, cultural, and philosophical look at the development of the Japanese martial art of Aikido. Sunderlin focuses on the influences brought to bear on Morihei Ueshiba, the founder of Aikido, and the subsequent cultivation of the latter's martial art as a vessel of Budo. The author a...
    Disponible

    63,06 €

  • Not by Love Alone
    Margaret Mehl
    Suzuki Shin'ichi, the Tokyo String Quartet, Midori - How did Japanese violinists manage to revolutionize violin teaching, win international competitions, conquer Western concert stages, study at world-famous conservatoires and take up positions in leading orchestras and prestigious music faculties? What enabled the Japanese to master Western classical music within a few decades...
    Disponible

    29,32 €

  • Pictures in Transformation
    Luca Maria Olivieri
    ...
    Disponible

    54,79 €

  • Life and Death in the Korean Bronze Age (c. 1500-400 BC)
    Sunwoo Kim
    This research focuses on the Bronze Age in selected areas of Korea; Seoul, Incheon, and Gyeonggi province. Two forms of evidence - settlements and monuments - are taken into account to identify their relationship with landscape and the social changes occurring between ca. 1500 to 400 cal BC. Life and death in the Bronze Age in Korea has not been synthetically investigated befor...
    Disponible

    108,34 €

  • South Asian Archaeology 2007
    Proceedings of the 19th Meeting of the European Association of South Asian Archaeology in Ravenna, Italy, July 2007.                     ...
    Disponible

    182,04 €

  • CHINA THROUGH AMERICAN EYES
    Wenxian Zhang / ZHANG WENXIAN
    Cultural understanding between the United States and China has been a long and complex process. The period from the mid-nineteenth century to the early twentieth century is not only a critical era in modern Chinese history, but also the peak time of illustrated news reporting in the United States. Besides images from newspapers and journals, this collection also contains pictur...
    Disponible

    159,39 €

Otros libros del autor

  • 李宗恩医生文存
    Wei-Hua Lee
    This is a collecting of research journal articals (English), articals published on journals (Chinese) and newspapers, speeches, letters, and diary (1958-1962) by Dr. Chung-un Lee, the founder of Guiyang Medical College and the first Chinese President of the Peking Union Medical College. ...
    Disponible

    20,38 €