Literature DB >> 19048809

Transforming public health?: a critical review of progress made against enteric diseases during the American-led occupation of Japan (1945-52).

Chris Aldous1.   

Abstract

Historical assessments of the Occupation's efforts to tackle enteric diseases (cholera, typhoid, paratyphoid and dysentery) have generally reflected a celebratory narrative of US-inspired public health reforms, strongly associated with the head of the Public Health and Welfare Section, Crawford F. Sams. Close inspection of the documentary record, however, reveals much greater continuity with pre-war Japanese public health practices than has hitherto been acknowledged. Indeed, there are strong grounds for disputing American claims of novelty and innovation in such areas as immunisation, particularly in relation to typhoid vaccine, and environmental sanitation, where disparaging comments about the careless use of night soil and a reluctance to control flies and other disease vectors reveal more about the politics of public health reform than the reality of pre-war practices. Likewise, the representation of American-inspired sanitary teams as clearly distinct from and far superior to traditional sanitary associations (eisei kumiai) was closer to propaganda than an accurate rendering of past and present developments.

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Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 19048809      PMCID: PMC2746355     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nihon Ishigaku Zasshi        ISSN: 0549-3323


  6 in total

1.  Exposure, resistance and life expectancy: disease and death during the economic development of Japan, 1900-1960.

Authors:  S R Johansson; C Mosk
Journal:  Popul Stud (Camb)       Date:  1987

2.  Taming the wilderness: the lifestyle improvement movement in rural Japan, 1925-1965.

Authors:  S Partner
Journal:  Monum Nihon       Date:  2001

3.  American public health administration meets the problems of the Orient in Japan.

Authors:  C F SAMS
Journal:  Am J Public Health Nations Health       Date:  1952-05

4.  On the mutual indebtedness of Japanese and Western medicine.

Authors:  I Veith
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  1978       Impact factor: 1.314

5.  Censorship of medical journals in occupied Japan.

Authors:  S Nishimura
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1995-08-09       Impact factor: 56.272

6.  The US medical occupation of Japan and history of the Japanese-language edition of JAMA.

Authors:  S Nishimura
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1995-08-02       Impact factor: 56.272

  6 in total

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