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The 1927 “Emetine Injection Incident” in Colonial Korea and the Intervention of Korean Western-Trained Doctors

Authors
 Park Yunjae 
Citation
 KOREA JOURNAL, Vol.50(1) : 160-177, 2010 
Journal Title
KOREA JOURNAL
ISSN
 0023-3900 
Issue Date
2010
Keywords
distoma ; emetine injection ; Korean Western doctor ; Hanseong Medical Association (HMA) ; sanitary police system
Abstract
The major cause of 1927s so-called Emetine Injection Incident was the compulsory administration of emetine injections instituted by the colonial Korean sanitary police system, which aimed to create a hygienic environment for Koreans in a cost-effective manner. Though some Koreans criticized this compulsory police-administered treatment, this incident did not serve as a turning point that led either to the improvement or abolishment of the sanitary police system. After officially confirming that patients were poisoned, the Hanseong Medical Association (HMA) did not try to use the incident as a chance to raise their voice to improve the colonial medical system. Given that the aim of the HMA was to benefit medical practitioners, intervening in administrative actions may have laid outside its domain of interest. The HMA, as well as other Korean political organizations, failed to harness the anger generated by this incident to improve the sanitary environment in Korea. However, after the risks of the injection were publicized, Koreans began to be suspicious of injections performed by the police. The Emetine Incident led Korean people to see the sanitary policy of the colonial government from a different angle
Files in This Item:
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Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Medical Humanities and Social Sciences (인문사회의학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Park, Yun Jae(박윤재)
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/102793
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