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A Farmer Becoming a Quasi-doctor: The Daegok Diary and Rural Healthcare from the 1960s to the 1980s

机译:一位农民成为一项准医生:从20世纪60年代到20世纪80年代的Daegok日记和农村医疗保健

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摘要

This article attempts to review the reality of rural health care in Korea from the 1960s to the 1980s by analyzing the Daegok Diary. There has been two myths about rural healthcare. One is that the absence of institutional medicine was replaced by folk medicine, which could be identified with folk remedies or shamanic healing distinguished from Western medicine. This is a frame that understands institutional and Western medicine as a pair and folk medicine and traditional medicine as another. Another popular belief is that rural healthcare had remained almost nonexistent, and only dramatically improved after the Regional Health Insurance was implemented. Of course, some claim that the Regional Health Insurance was disadvantageous to farmers, but it is generally understood that there was an absence of government policy regarding medical care. The Daegok Diary, telling many aspects of rural life, is a good source to reflect on these common notions. Unlike other farmers’ diaries, the diary of Shin Kwonsik contains a wealth of medical culture records because he chose unique ways to cure his and neighbors’ illnesses by himself. It can be summarized as the life of “quasi-doctor”. Shin was distinguished from quacks in that he practiced as an intellectual in the village rather than as a profession, and that he learned official medical knowledge and recognized the difference between a licensed physician and himself. Also, he was different from doctors because of the lack of a medical license and the limited range of diseases that he could treat. The life of quasi-doctor shows the social structure of rural areas in Korea from the 1960s to the 1980s. The reality of rural healthcare can be summarized in two ways. First, the medical vacuum was filled by civilian efforts. There was virtually no institutional healthcare in rural areas, but the government did little to improve the situation . The policy of sending doctors to the countryside proved to be ineffective, and the community doctor system did not work properly. Health Insurance was also a system for city workers rather than farmers. In the late 1970s, the situation only slightly improved due to reasons unrelated to the government policy regarding rural healthcare. These were improvements in traffic conditions and the increasing popularity of private insurance, which improved the physical and economic accessibility to medical institutions. Second, Western medicine had become a part of folk medicine. Those who could not go to a hospital utilized Western medicine, which had penetrated the folk medical culture. When people were sick, they bought Western drugs from pharmacies, drug dealers, and sometimes quacks. The knowledge of Western medicine also spread widely, with family medical books such as Million People’s Medicine as the medium. These two characteristics show that the existing myths that regard the absence of government policy as that of medical care and interpret the medical vacuum as the prevalence of folk remedies and shamanic healing are far from the truth. From the 1960s to the 1980s, gaps in institutional medicine was filled by Western medicine which had become part of the folk medicine already, and the accessibility of institutional medicine was improved through civilian efforts. Of course, the Daegok Diary shows more than the social structure of rural areas. It also reveals a lot about the man who wrote it, Shin Kwonsik. Unlike the others, Shin chose to become a quasi-doctor because of his separation from the tradition and his desire to learn. He grew up alone without parental care and later moved to Seoul by himself. This meant a break with the tradition. He joined the army in the wake of the Korean War and learned how to give injections there. After he was discharged, he devoured many books and newspapers including Million People’s Medicine. In short, the existence of a quasi-doctor like Shin was the result of the combination of the absence of institutional medicine, the predominance of Western medicine, and the characteristic of Shin as a ‘learning modern.’
机译:本文试图通过分析大谷日记审查韩国从20世纪60年代到80年代农村医疗卫生的现实。有许多关于农村医疗卫生两个神话。其一是,由于体制没有药是由民间中医,这可能与民间偏方或萨满教的愈合,从西医的区别标识代替。这是一个理解制度和西方医学作为一对和民间医药和传统医药作为另一个框架。另一种流行的看法是,农村医疗卫生一直保持几乎不存在,只有极大地提高区域医疗保险实施后。当然,有些人声称,该地区健康保险是不利的农民,但一般的理解是,关于医疗保健的没有政府的政策。该大谷日记,讲述农村生活的许多方面,是一个很好的来源,以反映这些共同的观念。不像其他农民的日记,申Kwonsik的日记包含了丰富的医学文化记录,因为他选择了治愈他和邻居独特的方式通过自己的疾病。这可以概括为“准医生”的生活。信是从江湖医生区别在于他实践了作为一个知识分子在村里,而不是作为一种职业,他学会了官方的医学知识和公认的执业医师和他本人之间的区别。此外,他从因缺乏医疗执照和他能治疗疾病的范围有限的医生不同。准医生展示了生活在20世纪60年代到80年代在韩国农村的社会结构。农村医疗的现实可以从两个方面来概括。首先,医疗真空是由民间的努力填补。有在农村地区几乎没有医疗机构,但政府做一点改善这种状况。发送医生下乡的政策被证明是无效的,和社区医生系统没有正常工作。健康保险也是为城市工人而不是农民的制度。在70年代末,这种情况只有轻微由于无关的关于农村医疗卫生的政府政策原因改善。这些都是在交通条件的改善和私人保险的日益普及,提高了身体和经济上获得医疗机构。二,西医已成为民间医药的一部分。这些谁不能去利用西医医院,它已经渗透民间医药文化。当人们生病,他们买西药药店,药商,有时庸医。西医的知识也广为流传,与家人的医疗书籍,如百万人民医学为介质。这两个特点表明,这方面如果没有政府政策为医疗和解释医疗真空民间偏方和萨满愈合的患病率存在​​神话与事实相差太远。从20世纪60年代到80年代,在机构药品差距是由西医这已经成为民间医药的一部分已经满了,机构药品的可获得是通过民间的努力改善。当然,大谷日记显示出比农村的社会结构更多。它也揭示了很多关于谁写它的人,善Kwonsik。不像其他人,申选择了做,因为来自传统分离他和他的学习愿望的准医生。他独自一人从小就没有父母照顾,后来被自己感动到首尔。这意味着与传统的休息。他在朝鲜战争之后参军,并学会了如何打针那里。他出院后,他狼吞虎咽许多书籍和报纸,包括百万人民的药。总之,准医生如Shin的存在是缺乏制度性的药,西药的优势,作为一个新的特征的组合的结果,“学习现代。”

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    Seungmann PARK;

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  • 年度 2018
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  • 正文语种 kor;eng
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