KMID : 0877120200330010011
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Journal of Korean Medical History 2020 Volume.33 No. 1 p.11 ~ p.20
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A study of the Office for Saving Lives (üÀìÑßþ), a government office in the Joseon, through its history and use of a standing prescription
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Park Hun-Pyeong
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Abstract
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The Office for Saving Lives (üÀìÑßþ) (OSL) was the office in charge of the treatment and relief of the poor in the Joseon Dynasty. This study disputes prior scholarship on the OSL by analyzing the use of a ready-made prescription and by focusing on the personality of the OSL¡¯s medical institutions.
The work of the three government offices, the Office of Great Mercy (ÓÞÝèêÂ) (OGM), which was the formal office of OSL, the Office of Benefiting People (û³ÚÅßþ) and the Office of Aiding Life (ðßæêÂ), overlapped in the area of relief of the common people. But OGM was different from the other two in that it was not a purely medical office, had no educational function, and did not manage medicine. By analyzing a standing prescription, this article argues: 1) Heojun¡¯s influence on the composition of a standing prescription is absolute. 2) Epidemic warm disease (è®æ¹) was a major social problem in terms of emergency medical care at the time. 3) In the late Joseon Dynasty, the treatment of epidemic warm diseases became more sophisticated than the previous era.
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KEYWORD
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Korean medical history, Office for Saving People, epidemic disease, ready-made prescription, Office of Great Mercy, Office of Benefiting People
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