» Articles » PMID: 28605888

Origins and Evolution of Social Medicine and Contemporary Social Medicine in Korea

Overview
Specialty Public Health
Date 2017 Jun 14
PMID 28605888
Citations 5
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Social medicine is recognized as one of medical specialties in many countries. However, social medicine has never been formally introduced to Korea, presumably because the term and its principles were not accepted for some years in the past in American medicine, which has strongly influenced Korean medicine. This paper describes the origins and evolution of social medicine and briefly discusses contemporary social medicine in Korea. Social medicine was initiated in France and Germany in 1848. Since then, it has expanded globally and developed in diverse ways. Included in core principles of social medicine is that social and economic conditions have important effects on health and disease, and that these relationships must be subjected to scientific investigation. The term 'social medicine' is rarely used in Korea, but many of its subject matters are incorporated into preventive medicine which, besides prevention, deals with population health that is inescapably social. However, the Korean preventive medicine directs little attention to the basic concepts and principles of social medicine, upon which systematic development of social medicine can be based. Thus, it is necessary to supplement the social medicine contents of preventive medicine through formalizing the linkages between the two fields. One way of doing so would be to change the title of 'preventive medicine' course in medical colleges to 'preventive and social medicine,' as in many other countries, and to adjust the course contents accordingly.

Citing Articles

Toward an Integrated Framework in Health and Human Rights Education: Transformative Pedagogies in Social Medicine, Collective Health, and Structural Competency.

Ortega L, Westerhaus M, Finnegan A, Bhatt A, Owilli A, Turigye B Health Hum Rights. 2023; 25(1):105-117.

PMID: 37266318 PMC: 9973511.


The Health Care System Debate and the Health Care Policy of a Unified Nation Immediately after the Liberation.

Kim J Uisahak. 2022; 30(3):499-545.

PMID: 35073559 PMC: 10556423. DOI: 10.13081/kjmh.2021.30.499.


Students or medical professionals: whose knowledge improved after social-medicine training? Results from a quasi-experimental evaluation study.

Muschalla B, Baron S, Klevers T Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2022; 57(7):1505-1514.

PMID: 34988614 PMC: 9246797. DOI: 10.1007/s00127-021-02197-4.


Use and impact of social prescribing: a mixed-methods feasibility study protocol.

Jani A, Liyanage H, Hoang U, Moore L, Ferreira F, Yonova I BMJ Open. 2020; 10(9):e037681.

PMID: 32948564 PMC: 7511614. DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-037681.


Making social prescriptions mainstream.

Jani A, Gray M J R Soc Med. 2019; 112(11):459-461.

PMID: 31710824 PMC: 7164317. DOI: 10.1177/0141076819848304.

References
1.
Hufford D, Barnard D, Green M, Hawkins A . Reading and teaching social medicine. [Review of: Henderson GE; King NMP; Strauss RP; Estroff SE; Churchill LR. The social medicine reader. Duke University Press, 1997]. Med Humanit Rev. 2001; 12(2):60-5. View

2.
Rosen G . Approaches to a concept of social medicine; a historical survey. Milbank Mem Fund Q. 1948; 26(1):7-21. View

3.
HOBSON W . What is social medicine?. Br Med J. 1949; 2(4619):125-30. PMC: 2050686. DOI: 10.1136/bmj.2.4619.125. View

4.
Cruickshank J, Mbanya J, Wilks R, Balkau B, McFarlane-Anderson N, Forrester T . Sick genes, sick individuals or sick populations with chronic disease? The emergence of diabetes and high blood pressure in African-origin populations. Int J Epidemiol. 2001; 30(1):111-7. DOI: 10.1093/ije/30.1.111. View

5.
Kasper J, Greene J, Farmer P, Jones D . All Health Is Global Health, All Medicine Is Social Medicine: Integrating the Social Sciences Into the Preclinical Curriculum. Acad Med. 2015; 91(5):628-32. DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000001054. View