Results 261 to 270 of about 1,204,731 (299)
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America's Korea, Korea's Vietnam
Critical Asian Studies, 2001Atrocities committed by American soldiers against Vietnamese civilians during the Vietnam War have once again become an issue of public debate in the United States, yet similar actions by South Korean troops fighting America's war in Vietnam remain virtually unknown in the West.
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Archives of Dermatology, 1969
Although dermatology was almost unknown in Korea prior to World War II, the specialty has made great strides within the past decade. As early as 1917, Kung Sun Oh, patriarch of Korean dermatology, had been professor at Severance Union Medical College. Today, there are 108 dermatologists certified by the Korean Board of Dermatology, whose requirements ...
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Although dermatology was almost unknown in Korea prior to World War II, the specialty has made great strides within the past decade. As early as 1917, Kung Sun Oh, patriarch of Korean dermatology, had been professor at Severance Union Medical College. Today, there are 108 dermatologists certified by the Korean Board of Dermatology, whose requirements ...
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China's Korea Policy: From “One Korea” to “Two Koreas”
Asian Affairs: An American Review, 1995T raditionally, security and ideological concerns have been the most important factors in determining China's policy toward Korea. Frequently describing the Korean peninsula as the lips protecting China (the teeth), Beijing has always attached special importance to Korea.
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Archives of Surgery, 2004
The first and second years of kindergarten are optional. Obligatory education begins with primary school (grades 1 through 6) for 6 years, middle school (grades 7 through 9) for 3 years, high school (grades 10 through 12) for 3 years, and college for 4 years, except for medical college which lasts 6 years (for an MD degree) including 2 years in ...
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The first and second years of kindergarten are optional. Obligatory education begins with primary school (grades 1 through 6) for 6 years, middle school (grades 7 through 9) for 3 years, high school (grades 10 through 12) for 3 years, and college for 4 years, except for medical college which lasts 6 years (for an MD degree) including 2 years in ...
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2015
Until the 1950s almost all Korean infants were breast fed until they were 6 months old. By the 1960s upper-middle class mothers who were influenced by rapid Westernization were feeding their infants with imported formulas. As the Korean food industry made formulas widely available in the late 1960s and 1970s bottle feeding became widely practiced ...
Woo Kyoung Kim+4 more
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Until the 1950s almost all Korean infants were breast fed until they were 6 months old. By the 1960s upper-middle class mothers who were influenced by rapid Westernization were feeding their infants with imported formulas. As the Korean food industry made formulas widely available in the late 1960s and 1970s bottle feeding became widely practiced ...
Woo Kyoung Kim+4 more
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Social Science & Medicine, 1988
Thirty pregnant women, their families and environment have been submitted to a prospective ethnographic study with inventory of childbearing behavior. The results were two-fold. They allowed on the one hand to reconstruct the traditional Korean birthing system. On the other they revealed an appalling amount of obstetrical pathology.
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Thirty pregnant women, their families and environment have been submitted to a prospective ethnographic study with inventory of childbearing behavior. The results were two-fold. They allowed on the one hand to reconstruct the traditional Korean birthing system. On the other they revealed an appalling amount of obstetrical pathology.
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Nursing Science Quarterly, 2007
Nursing in Korea with support from the federal government is shifting focus to better address the needs of an aging population, in particular the increasing number of persons with dementia. The family in Korea is struggling to balance family caregiving obligations with the demands of employment in a competitive world economy.
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Nursing in Korea with support from the federal government is shifting focus to better address the needs of an aging population, in particular the increasing number of persons with dementia. The family in Korea is struggling to balance family caregiving obligations with the demands of employment in a competitive world economy.
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Korea, North Korea, and A Flower
New England Review, 2015Yin Lichuan, Fiona Sze-Lorrain
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