From respirator to Wu's mask: the transition of personal protective equipment in the Manchurian plague

被引:6
|
作者
Zhang Meng [1 ]
机构
[1] Peking Univ, Sch Hlth Humanities, Beijing, Peoples R China
关键词
Respirator; Wu's mask; Manchurian plague; tropical medicine; Wu Liande (Wu Lien-Teh);
D O I
10.1080/17535654.2020.1845529
中图分类号
K [历史、地理];
学科分类号
06 ;
摘要
This article traces the development of personal protective equipment in response to the Manchurian plague of 1910. It does so by means of the language and practice of tropical medicine. The respirators (huxiql) made of gauze and cotton that appeared at that time were first designed collectively by Chinese physicians in Harbin. However, such huxiqi were renamed "Mukden Masks" by the predominant English-speaking physicians at the International Plague Conference at Mukden in 1911 and presented as a Western innovation without acknowledging Chinese contributions. As Wu Liande gained more and more authority starting in the 1920s, he not only justified the application of masks in epidemics through a localized strategy of tropical medicine, but also reclaimed authorship of the Mukden mask. This allowed later generations of medical historians to acknowledge the making of "Wu's mask" (Wushi kouzhao). The personal protective equipment born in the Manchurian plague thus became a physical portrayal of the asymmetric and yet dynamic knowledge-production and -circulation between China and the West.
引用
收藏
页码:221 / 239
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The COVID-19 pandemic, personal protective equipment and respirator: A narrative review
    Ha, Jennifer F.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PRACTICE, 2020, 74 (10)
  • [2] Improving Tolerance to Snorkel Mask Use as Alternative Personal Protective Equipment
    Aljafar, Ghassan
    Connelly, Neil Roy
    Gagnon, Greg
    Aljafar, Hassan
    A & A PRACTICE, 2021, 15 (04): : e01449
  • [3] Personal Protective Equipment: A Pandora's Box
    Chawla, Gopal
    Abrol, Nupur
    Kakkar, Kamna
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2020, 24 (05) : 371 - 372
  • [4] OSHA's personal protective equipment standard
    Parks, DG
    LABORATORY MEDICINE, 1996, 27 (02) : 86 - &
  • [5] Behind the mask: physiologic effects of facial personal protective equipment during endoscopy
    Chisholm, Phillip R.
    Smith, Zachary L.
    GASTROINTESTINAL ENDOSCOPY, 2021, 94 (01) : 169 - 171
  • [6] Decontamination interventions for the reuse of surgical mask personal protective equipment: a systematic review
    Zorko, D. J.
    Gertsman, S.
    O'Hearn, K.
    Timmerman, N.
    Ambu-Ali, N.
    Dinh, T.
    Sampson, M.
    Sikora, L.
    McNally, J. D.
    Choong, K.
    JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL INFECTION, 2020, 106 (02) : 283 - 294
  • [7] Testing for coverage from personal protective equipment
    Heij, R.
    Steel, A. G.
    Young, P. J.
    ANAESTHESIA, 2020, 75 (07) : 966 - 967
  • [8] Personal Protective Equipment for Care of Pandemic Influenza Patients: A Training Workshop for the Powered Air Purifying Respirator
    Tompkins, Bonnie M.
    Kerchberger, John P.
    ANESTHESIA AND ANALGESIA, 2010, 111 (04): : 933 - 945
  • [9] Respiratory personal protective equipment for healthcare workers: impact of sex differences on respirator fit test results
    Ascott, Anna
    Crowest, Paul
    de Sausmarez, Eleanor
    Khan, Mansoor
    Chakladar, Abhijoy
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA, 2021, 126 (01) : E48 - E49
  • [10] COVID-19 pandemic and personal protective equipment shortage: protective efficacy comparing masks and scientific methods for respirator reuse
    Boskoski, Ivo
    Gallo, Camilla
    Wallace, Michael B.
    Costamagna, Guido
    GASTROINTESTINAL ENDOSCOPY, 2020, 92 (03) : 519 - 523