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BUILDING THE NATION THROUGH WOMEN'S HEALTH: MODERN ...

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private, and would have three or more of the faculties of arts, science, law, education,<br />

agriculture, commerce, engineering or medicine. In addition, independent colleges (duli xuexiao<br />

独立学校) could exist but were limited to no more than two faculties. The course of medical<br />

study would last five years, while all others were for four. 196<br />

Between 1931 and 1935, the Chinese National Commission on Medical Education<br />

standardized curricula and textbooks for national medical colleges and provincial medical<br />

schools. There were five national medical colleges in China by 1934: Shanghai (established in<br />

1908), Beijing (1912), Guangzhou (1926), Shanghai (1927), Nanjing (1935), plus two military<br />

medical schools in Nanjing (1902) and Kunming (1931). 197 In addition, there were six<br />

provincial-level medical schools, all with Chinese-language instruction: Hangzhou (established<br />

in 1912), Baoding (1916), Nanchang (1921), Kaifeng (1928), Jinan (1932), Kunming (1933).<br />

Furthermore, at least 17 private medical colleges and schools existed, all in major urban areas:<br />

five in Shanghai (1906, 1909, 1918, 1924, 1926), two in Guangzhou (1899, 1909), two in<br />

Shenyang (1912, 1921), and one each in Beijing (1906), Jinan (1909), HK (1912), Nantong<br />

(1912), Chengdu (1914), Changsha (1914), Taiyuan (1919), and Harbin (1926). 198 Most of these<br />

were run by missionaries.<br />

By 1935, there were reportedly 5,390 Western-trained physicians in China, 87 percent of<br />

whom were Chinese. Seventy-one percent of these Chinese doctors were educated in China, and<br />

the vast majority practiced in urban areas, with 22 percent of them in Shanghai alone. 199 By<br />

1934, there were over 550 Chinese female medical school graduates, including 463 from Chinese<br />

medical colleges, 70 from Japanese women’s medical schools, and 26 from American medical<br />

196 Ibid.<br />

197 Lucas, Chinese Medical Modernization: Comparative Policy Continuities, 1930s - 1980s, 69.<br />

198 Wong and Wu, History of Chinese Medicine: Being a Chronicle of Medical Happenings in China from Ancient<br />

Times to the Present Period, 795-98.<br />

199 Ibid., 799.<br />

77

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