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Canada-0-BALCONIES ไดเรกทอรีที่ บริษัท
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ข่าว บริษัท :
- Traditional Chinese Medicine
The exhibit Traditional Chinese Medicine compiles early influences, ancient texts, and public health posters to illustrate Chinese public health campaigns
- Class 1: Western Influence of Modern Medicine and Public Health in . . .
Class 1: Western Influence of Modern Medicine and Public Health in China during the 19th and Early 20th Centuries Introduction Modern Western medicine—biomedicine—was introduced to China in the 19th century by Western missionaries when they used medical service to open up Chinese society for evangelism
- Exhibition - Opium - National Library of Medicine
The enthusiasm for medical treatments created many addicts among doctors and their patients, yet reformers’ efforts to restrict opium use focused on Chinese immigrants and the practice of opium smoking that they had introduced to America
- National Library of Medicine - National Institutes of Health
NIH Virtual Tour: National Library of Medicine NLM is the world's largest biomedical library and a national resource for health professionals, scientists, and the public
- Smallpox: Variolation - National Library of Medicine
Variolation In Asia, practitioners developed the technique of variolation—the deliberate infection with smallpox Dried smallpox scabs were blown into the nose of an individual who then contracted a mild form of the disease Upon recovery, the individual was immune to smallpox Between 1% to 2% of those variolated died as compared to 30% who died when they contracted the disease naturally
- Further Reading - Greek Medicine
The Expressiveness of the Body and the Divergence of Greek and Chinese Medicine New York: Zone Books, 1999 Langholf, V Medical Theories in Hippocrates, Early Texts and the Epidemics Berlin: De Gruyter, 1990 Phillips, E D Greek Medicine: Philosophy and Medicine from Alcmaeon to the Alexandrians London New York: Routledge, 1973 Sassi
- Chinese Public Health Posters - National Library of Medicine
The exhibit Chinese Public Health Posters explores the impact of major epidemic diseases on 20th-century China through public health materials and posters
- Against The Odds:Serving the Community - National Library of Medicine
To provide health care in rural areas, in 1965 the Chinese government began training thousands of young people to treat common ailments These medical workers, known as barefoot doctors, spent half the working day providing health care and the rest of the time farming as they had done before By the 1970s, over one million people had been trained Although private medicine has since replaced
- Chinese Family Planning and Child Health Education
This exhibit from the National Library of Medicine explores China's family planning and public health campaigns through a large collection of public health posters
- Historical Anatomies on the Web: Hua: Author Title Description
Japanese physicians were heavily influenced by traditional Chinese medicine, especially many of its classical texts Because of this, Chinese medical classics were printed over and over again in Japan, usually in Chinese with Japanese reading marks and sometimes with commentary
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