▼ Refine Your Categories ▼

Click a term to refine your current search.

Subject

: all » Health & Medicine

Resource Type

: all » Image

Language

: all » Chinese

Social Tags

: all » Biology

Country

: all » United States

Province Or State

: all » Maryland
More options
[×]

Subject

: Health & Medicine
[×]

Resource Type

: Image
[×]

Language

: Chinese
[×]

Social Tags

: Biology
[×]

Country

: United States
[×]

Province Or State

: Maryland

Category: Health & Medicine, Image, Chinese, Biology, United States, Maryland

2 results

Results

History of Medicine Introduction The National Library of Medicine has recently acquired a large collection of Chinese Public Health materials, about seven thousand items produced from early 20th century to the year of SARS. The collection has a wide range of media presentations: posters, health newsletters, health newspapers, paintings, pharmaceutical advertisements, calendars, children's chess games, jigsaw puzzles on health topics, playing cards on SARS, lantern slides, negatives, photographs, and health award certificates, as well as books and journals. These materials present rich visual representations of public health concerns which were closely tied to the political, social, economic, and even military engagements of China during different time periods.

0
♥ 0
2,016 reads

History of Medicine Introduction 引言 Tuberculosis was one of the major epidemic diseases in 20th-century China, along with smallpox, malaria, cholera, schistosomiasis, and other epidemics. Organized efforts to fight the disease began in 1933 when the National Anti-Tuberculosis Association of China was established. From 1950 through 1980, the Chinese government launched anti-tuberculosis campaigns as part of the national public health movement. The Anti-TB Association and the Red Cross played important roles in the health education campaigns. Health posters became an important tool to disseminate health knowledge and methods of prevention and treatment. The campaigns, along with the universal free healthcare, led to a significant decline of tuberculosis.

0
♥ 0
3,910 reads