AnnualReport-1919 — Page 305

Administrative Reports 行政報告書 All AI Reviewed

M 58

This shows that 53.7% of patients preferred Western and 46.3% Eastern medicine.

These figures compare with:---

Western Eastern in 1918 54.2 45.8 in 1917 55.1 44.9 in 1916 50.7 49.3 in 1915 52.3 47.7 in 1914 38.58 61.42 in 1913 34.63 65.37 in 1912 36.8 63.2 in 1911 31.4 68.6

Death-rates.

Disease Deaths under Eastern treatment Deaths under Western treatment Diphtheria, Malaria, Syphilis, Cerebro-spinal Meningitis, 1,172=36·1% 731=19·8%

A.--Diseases for which there is a specific remedy:-

Western Eastern No. of cases Death-rate percentage No. of cases Death-rate percentage 3 66 8 10 121 10 86 44 74 2 33 27 89 35 38 92

B.-Diseases for which, at present, there is no specific remedy:--

Western Eastern Lobar pneumonia,.. 46 20 12 40 Influenza, 251 58 288 39 Pulmonary phthisis, 281 368 22 43

It will be seen that Western medicine, as judged by mortality is as 11:27 compared with Eastern medicine where there is a specific remedy known, and as 7:10 where a specific remedy is not known.

It is of interest to note that these figures are almost exactly the same as last year.

OUT-PATIENT DEPARTMENT.

Eastern treatment (new and old cases) 119,322

Western " 20,949

Approximately 84% of the out-patients received Eastern treatment. This has been the proportion for several years past and it is highly improbable that the proportion will seriously change till an increase of staff and general equipment is obtained.

REMARKS ON SPECIAL DISEASES.

Beri-beri. In all 870 cases were treated with 296 deaths, i.e., 34%. In 1918 there were 904 cases with a death-rate of 43.03%. During the year a certain number of selected cases were placed on marmite, a yeast extract which is stated to contain a high vitamine percentage. The result cannot be described as wholly satisfactory but the substance, which is pleasant to taste, was greatly appreciated.

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2026-05-06 20:32:36 · NVIDIA / meta/llama-4-maverick-17b-128e-instruct
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M 58 This shows that 53.7% of patients preferred Western and 46.3% Eastern medicine. These figures compare with:--- Western Eastern in 1918 54.2 45.8 in 1917 55.1 44.9 in 1916 50.7 49.3 in 1915 52.3 47.7 in 1914 38.58 61.42 in 1913 34.63 65.37 in 1912 36.8 63.2 in 1911 31.4 68.6 Death-rates. Disease Deaths under Eastern treatment Deaths under Western treatment Diphtheria, Malaria, Syphilis, Cerebro-spinal Meningitis, 1,172=36·1% 731=19·8% A.--Diseases for which there is a specific remedy:- Western Eastern No. of cases Death-rate percentage No. of cases Death-rate percentage 3 66 8 10 121 10 86 44 74 2 33 27 89 35 38 92 B.-Diseases for which, at present, there is no specific remedy:-- Western Eastern Lobar pneumonia,.. 46 20 12 40 Influenza, 251 58 288 39 Pulmonary phthisis, 281 368 22 43 It will be seen that Western medicine, as judged by mortality is as 11:27 compared with Eastern medicine where there is a specific remedy known, and as 7:10 where a specific remedy is not known. It is of interest to note that these figures are almost exactly the same as last year. OUT-PATIENT DEPARTMENT. Eastern treatment (new and old cases) 119,322 Western " 20,949 Approximately 84% of the out-patients received Eastern treatment. This has been the proportion for several years past and it is highly improbable that the proportion will seriously change till an increase of staff and general equipment is obtained. REMARKS ON SPECIAL DISEASES. Beri-beri. In all 870 cases were treated with 296 deaths, i.e., 34%. In 1918 there were 904 cases with a death-rate of 43.03%. During the year a certain number of selected cases were placed on marmite, a yeast extract which is stated to contain a high vitamine percentage. The result cannot be described as wholly satisfactory but the substance, which is pleasant to taste, was greatly appreciated.
Baseline (Original)
M 58 This shows that 53.7% of patients preferred Western and 46.3% Eastern medicine. These figures compare with :--- Western. Eastern. 54.2 45.8 in 1918 55'1 44.9 in 1917 50.7 49.3 in 1916 52.3 47.7 in 1915 38:58 61.42 in 1914 34.63 65.37 in 1913 36.8 63.2 in 1912 314 68.6 in 1911 Death-rates. Disease. Diphtheria, Malaria, Syphilis, Cerebro-spinal Meningitis, Deaths under Eastern treatment, Western treatment, 1,172=36·1% 731= 19·8% A.--Diseases for which there is a specific remedy:- Western. No. of Death-rate Eastern. No. of Death-rate cases. percentage. cases. percentage. 3 66 8 10 121 10 86 44 74 2 33 27 89 35 38 92 B.-Diseases for which, at present, there is no specific remedy:-- Lobar pneumonia,.. 46 Influenza, 251 Pulmonary phthisis, 281 20 12 40 58 288 368 39 22 43 It will be seen that Western medicine, as judged by mortality is as 11: 27 compared with Eastern medicine where there is a specific remedy known, and as 7: 10 where a specific remedy is not known. It is of interest to note that these figures are almost exactly the same as last year. ment. OUT-PATIENT DEPARTMENT. Eastern treatment (new and old cases) Western >" 119,322 20,949 Approximately 84% of the out-patients received Eastern treat- This has been the proportion for several years past and it is highly improbable that the proportion will seriously change till an increase of staff and general equipment is obtained. REMARKS ON SPECIAL DISEASES. Beri-beri. In all 870 cases were treated with 296 deaths, i.e., 34%. In 1918 there were 904 cases with a death-rate of 43'03%. During the year a certain number of selected cases were placed on marmite, a yeast extract which is stated to contain a high vitamine percentage. The result cannot be described as wholly satisfactory but the substance, which is pleasant to taste, avas greatly appreciated
2026-05-06 20:32:36 · Baseline
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M 58

This shows that 53.7% of patients preferred Western and 46.3% Eastern medicine.

These figures compare with :---

Western.

Eastern.

54.2

45.8

in 1918

55'1

44.9

in 1917

50.7

49.3

in 1916

52.3

47.7

in 1915

38:58

61.42

in 1914

34.63

65.37

in 1913

36.8

63.2

in 1912

314

68.6

in 1911

Death-rates.

Disease.

Diphtheria,

Malaria,

Syphilis,

Cerebro-spinal

Meningitis,

Deaths under Eastern treatment,

Western treatment,

1,172=36·1% 731= 19·8%

A.--Diseases for which there is a specific remedy:-

Western.

No. of Death-rate

Eastern.

No. of Death-rate

cases.

percentage.

cases.

percentage.

3

66

8

10

121

10

86

44

74

2

33

27

89

35

38

92

B.-Diseases for which, at present, there is no specific remedy:--

Lobar pneumonia,..

46

Influenza,

251

Pulmonary phthisis, 281

20

12

40

58

288

368

39

22

43

It will be seen that Western medicine, as judged by mortality is as 11: 27 compared with Eastern medicine where there is a specific remedy known, and as 7: 10 where a specific remedy is not known.

It is of interest to note that these figures are almost exactly the same as last

year.

ment.

OUT-PATIENT DEPARTMENT.

Eastern treatment (new and old cases)

Western

>"

119,322 20,949

Approximately 84% of the out-patients received Eastern treat- This has been the proportion for several years past and it is highly improbable that the proportion will seriously change till an increase of staff and general equipment is obtained.

REMARKS ON SPECIAL DISEASES.

Beri-beri. In all 870 cases were treated with 296 deaths, i.e., 34%. In 1918 there were 904 cases with a death-rate of 43'03%. During the year a certain number of selected cases were placed on marmite, a yeast extract which is stated to contain a high vitamine percentage. The result cannot be described as wholly satisfactory but the substance, which is pleasant to taste, avas greatly appreciated

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