Medicine in ChinaUniversity of Chicago Press, 1914 - 113 strani |
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
anatomy appointed assistants autopsies beds Board body buildings Canton Changsha chemistry Chihli Chinese government Church Commission connection considerable number course diseases dissection English equipment established Faculty fees five Foochow foreign doctor foreign medical foreign nurses FRANCIS WELD PEABODY German gold graduates Hangchow Hankow Harvard Medical School Hongkong hospitals in China Hunan important institution instruction Japan Japanese John's Kiangsu Kiukiang Kung Yee language London Missionary Society medical education medical missionaries Medical Special College medicine in China METHODIST EPISCOPAL HOSPITAL middle school mission hospitals Missionary Society Moukden Nanking native obstetrical officials out-patients patients Peking Medical Special population practice practitioners preparatory Presbyterian present professors provinces railway requirements for admission Rockefeller Foundation rooms salaries school and hospital Shanghai staff standard surgery teachers teaching Tientsin tion Tsinanfu tuition Union Medical College University usually visited wards western medicine Wuchang Yale Mission Yangtze valley
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 100 - York, for the purpose of receiving and maintaining a fund or funds and applying the income thereof to promote the advancement and diffusion of knowledge and understanding among the people of the United States, by aiding technical schools, institutions of higher learning, libraries, scientific research, hero funds, useful publications and by such other agencies and means as shall from time...
Stran 37 - ... made the following comments after their study of the subject : "The schools are hampered from the start by an inability to get a sufficient number of girls with a proper preliminary education. Until the whole standard of education of girls is raised, and until a higher education for women has been developed, the medical schools will be forced to keep their admission requirements low and to struggle with a poorly prepared group of students. It would hardly seem wise to take active steps to foster...
Stran 4 - With the view of giving effect to these recommendations every endeavour should be made to organize a Central Public Health Department, more especially with regard to the management and notification of future outbreaks of infectious diseases.
Stran 8 - ... these work in hospitals or medical schools, not as practitioners. There are a few graduates from missionary medical schools who are now practicing, but there have been to date probably less than 160 such graduates and many of them are working in mission hospitals or medical schools. On the whole then, outside the mission hospitals and outside the treaty ports there are very few practitioners in China who have had any training in western medicine and almost none who have been adequately trained....
Stran 42 - Peking can be reached in one day from Moukden by express and in ordinary trains by two days' travel from sunrise to sunset. The language is practically the same in Peking and in Moukden, with the exception of very unimportant provincial variations. For this reason most of the students in Moukden could easily go to Peking for their medical training and it seems, therefore, useless •to undertake a separate medical educational work in Manchuria under present circumstances, when the number of qualified...
Stran 37 - ... work in small and poorly equipped schools and hospitals and have been greatly handicapped by their inability to secure a sufficient number of competent women doctors to come to China as teachers. The China Medical Commission made the following comments after their study of the subject: "The schools are hampered from the start by an inability to get a sufficient number of girls with a proper preliminary education. Until the whole standard of education of girls is raised, and until a higher education...
Stran 43 - ... students in Moukden could easily go to Peking for the medical training and it seems, therefore, useless to undertake a separate medical educational work in Manchuria under present circumstances, when the number of qualified students throughout the country, and the resources in men and money for the maintenance of the schools, are so limited. This is also the opinion of many of the leading medical missionaries in China. Another reason for this conclusion is the fact that the Japanese government,...
Stran 23 - Superintendent having the same relation to the work and the person in charge of it that he would have were it a work in the charge of any Member of the Conference or Mission. if 389, § 1. The funds of the Society shall not be raised by collections or subscriptions taken...
Stran 100 - In 1914, the Rockefeller Foundation, whose purpose was that of "receiving and maintaining a fund or funds and applying the income and principal thereof to promote the well-being of mankind throughout the world," deputed a China Medical Commission to visit China and inquire into the condition of medical education, hospitals and public health in that country. This commission arrived in China in April, visited the principal centers of medical activity and left Shanghai in August.
Stran 34 - In the last few years, however, there has been a great increase in the number of female patients in hospitals conducted by men, and...