The Limits of Innovation: Provincial Hospitals in Colonial Korea, 1925-1945, with a Focus on the Role of Disease Control

Bangweon Lee
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Abstract

This study attempts to identify changes in the local medical environment and their limitations, focusing on “disease treatment,” one of the functions of provincial hospitals in the Japanese colonial era. Until 1945, when Korea was liberated from Japan, the provincial hospitals during the Japanese colonial era treated diseases of Japanese and Koreans as a central local medical institution. Until the liberation period, the size of each of the 46 provincial hospitals established nationwide varied widely, but the number of doctors continued to increase and the medical department was further subdivided. Jahye Hospital, the predecessor of the provincial hospital, classified patients into general patients who could afford to pay for the treatment and charity patients, enacted regulations to treat economically poor Koreans free of charge, and in 1912 began to provide circuit treatment for patients in remote areas without medical services. However, after 1920, after switching to a provincial clinic, after 1930, and after the end of the 1930s, the proportion of Koreans treated in provincial hospitals, most of whom were charity patients, plunged to 3.75 percent by 1941, and the number of clinics conducting circuit treatment decreased and became nominal. Provincial hospitals also played a role as a base hospital for treating diseases that were difficult to treat in general hospitals, such as infectious diseases, morphine addiction, and tuberculosis. Quarantine buildings for infectious diseases were installed from the beginning, and patients were quarantined when infectious diseases broke out. However, most of the quarantine rooms in the provincial hospitals were for general patients, and only the provincial hospitals in Anseong and Pyongyang had beds for charity patients with infectious disease, but their total number was only 14, which was very insignificant. As a result of the Japanese colonial government’s policy on morphine addicts in Korea, morphine-addicted patients were forcibly admitted to designated provincial clinics after 1927, treated for several months, and discharged after full recovery. Through this process, the Japanese authorities in the late 1930s estimated that morphine addicts had disappeared. An active national policy for tuberculosis patients began in 1936. Some provincial hospitals established separate isolation rooms for tuberculosis patients, but the number of beds was very insufficient compared to the number of tuberculosis patients distributed across the country at that time, and there were no beds for charity patients with tuberculosis. The provincial hospitals during the Japanese colonial era carried out various activities to treat diseases as a local hub hospital where people could experience Western medicine, but Koreans suffered from communication problems and ethnic discrimination, and the actual benefits were largely different from those advocated by the Japanese authorities as there were fewer opportunities for charity treatment for Koreans who were economically deprived at that time.
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创新的极限:韩国殖民地的省级医院,1925-1945,重点是疾病控制的作用
本研究试图识别当地医疗环境的变化及其局限性,重点关注“疾病治疗”,这是日本殖民时期省级医院的功能之一。直到1945年光复之前,日本帝国主义强占时期的地方医院一直是治疗日本人和韩国人疾病的中心医疗机构。直到解放前,全国建立的46所省立医院的规模各不相同,但医生人数不断增加,医疗部门进一步细分。市立医院的前身——济惠医院将患者分为有能力治疗的普通患者和慈善患者,制定了对经济困难的国民进行免费治疗的规定,并于1912年开始对没有医疗服务的偏远地区的患者进行巡回治疗。但是,1920年以后,在转到地方诊所之后,1930年以后,在30年代末之后,在地方医院接受治疗的韩国人的比例,其中大部分是慈善病人,到1941年下降到3.75%,进行巡回治疗的诊所数量减少,成为名义上的。省级医院还发挥了基地医院的作用,治疗在综合医院难以治疗的疾病,如传染病、吗啡成瘾和结核病。从一开始就设置了传染病检疫所,一旦发生传染病就对患者进行隔离。但是,地方医院的隔离室大部分是普通病人,只有安城和平壤的地方医院有传染病慈善病人的床位,但总数只有14个,非常微不足道。由于日本殖民政府对韩国吗啡成瘾者的政策,1927年以后,吗啡成瘾者被强行送入指定的省级诊所,治疗数月,完全康复后出院。通过这一过程,日本当局在20世纪30年代末估计吗啡成瘾者已经消失。1936年,一项针对结核病患者的积极国家政策开始实施。一些省级医院为结核病患者建立了单独的隔离病房,但与当时全国结核病患者的分布数量相比,床位数量非常不足,而且慈善结核病患者没有床位。 日本帝国主义强占时期,地方医院作为可以体验西药的地方中心医院,开展了各种各样的疾病治疗活动,但由于韩国人存在沟通障碍和种族歧视,而且当时经济困难的韩国人接受慈善治疗的机会较少,实际效果与日本当局所主张的大不相同。
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