Abstract
Since the American occupation of Manila, the health care system of the Philippines was transformed with its goal of “modernizing the Philippines.” Systematic Western prevention and control measures and institutions were established. This in turn affected the practice of Chinese medicine, which was present since the Spanish period. With the help of Dr. Tee Hankee and other doctors, local Chinese medicine gradually developed into a combination of Chinese and Western medicine through the developments of the Chinese General Hospital and the establishment of the Filipino Chinese Western Medicine Association. The melding of Chinese and Western medicine formed a distinctive Philippine Chinese medical culture that was cultivated through the Chinese General Hospital, which has become one of the top local hospitals. EDITORIAL NOTE: Translated in English from the original Chinese version 《美殖时期大马尼拉的流行病防治及对菲华医学的影响》. Social Transformations Journal of the Global South publishes bilingual versions of selected submissions to engage with the thinking in, on, and from the Global South by way of the languages of its constituencies.
Recommended Citation
Hui, Peng; Huang, Ziyang; and Lim, Franz David Ong
(2021)
"Health Care in Metropolitan Manila During the American Colonial Era: A History of the Management of Infectious Diseases and Its Effects on the Practice of Chinese Medicine (English Translation),"
Social Transformations Journal of the Global South: Vol. 9:
Iss.
2, Article 5.
Available at:
https://archium.ateneo.edu/socialtransformations/vol9/iss2/5
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Home > Journals > SOCIALTRANSFORMATIONS > Vol. 9 (2021) > Iss. 2
Health Care in Metropolitan Manila During the American Colonial Era: A History of the Management of Infectious Diseases and Its Effects on the Practice of Chinese Medicine (English Translation)
Authors
Peng Hui, Central China Normal UniversityFollow
Ziyang Huang, Central China Normal University
Franz David Ong LimFollow
Abstract
Since the American occupation of Manila, the health care system of the Philippines was transformed with its goal of “modernizing the Philippines.” Systematic Western prevention and control measures and institutions were established. This in turn affected the practice of Chinese medicine, which was present since the Spanish period. With the help of Dr. Tee Hankee and other doctors, local Chinese medicine gradually developed into a combination of Chinese and Western medicine through the developments of the Chinese General Hospital and the establishment of the Filipino Chinese Western Medicine Association. The melding of Chinese and Western medicine formed a distinctive Philippine Chinese medical culture that was cultivated through the Chinese General Hospital, which has become one of the top local hospitals. EDITORIAL NOTE: Translated in English from the original Chinese version 《美殖时期大马尼拉的流行病防治及对菲华医学的影响》. Social Transformations Journal of the Global South publishes bilingual versions of selected submissions to engage with the thinking in, on, and from the Global South by way of the languages of its constituencies.
Recommended Citation
Hui, Peng; Huang, Ziyang; and Lim, Franz David Ong (2021) "Health Care in Metropolitan Manila During the American Colonial Era: A History of the Management of Infectious Diseases and Its Effects on the Practice of Chinese Medicine (English Translation)," Social Transformations Journal of the Global South: Vol. 9: Iss. 2, Article 5.
Available at: https://archium.ateneo.edu/socialtransformations/vol9/iss2/5
DOWNLOADS
Since November 06, 2024
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