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      • In 1915, Hashimoto returned to Japan via England as the First World War was underway.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hakaru_Hashimoto
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  2. In 1915, Hashimoto returned to Japan via England as the First World War was underway. In 1916, he came back to his hometown, Igamachi, and became the town doctor, setting up his own surgical clinic. As a surgeon and general practitioner, Hashimoto would frequently visit patients in their homes, often utilising a rickshaw, regardless of distance ...

  3. Mar 25, 2012 · Hakaru Hashimoto: 1881-1934. The Japan Thyroid Association uses Hakaru Hashimoto’s picture in its logo as a way to pass on his pioneering spirit to today’s physicians. At 35, Hashimoto...

  4. It is not clear whether or not he went back to Fukuoka but, if he did, it was only for a short time because by April of 1916 he had been prevailed upon to return to his home village and set up his medical practice in the small community hospital doing both general practice and surgery.

    • Early Settlers, The Construction of Ancient Tombs, and Epidemics
    • “Spells” to Prevent Infectious Disease
    • Harigami Instead of Vaccines
    • Entertaining The God of Pestilence
    • Knowledge of Epidemiology in Edo
    • Perfunctory Response to The Spanish Flu
    • Quarantining relied on The People

    In the fifth year of the reign of Emperor Sujin (around 300 CE), half a century after Yamataikoku and Himiko, an epidemic spread across the Japanese islands, killing more than half the population. I would like to outline the historical facts of how the authority and rituals linked to the current emperor arose out of the ensuing social unrest. At th...

    At a time when there were no remedies or vaccines, people were powerless in the face of infectious diseases. Therefore, they thought up one spell after another to prevent disease. One such spell is the Kyoto Gion Festival, which is held in July every year. In 2020, the famous Yamaboko Junko procession at the Gion Festival was canceled due to the CO...

    InEkibyo to fukujin (Plagues and gods of good fortune), Oshima Tatehiko studies numerous examples of folklore about the god of pestilence and the premodern Japanese. At my workplace, the International Research Center for Japanese Studies, we have the Illustrations of Strange Phenomena and Yokai (Ghosts, Monsters, Spirits) database, which allows us ...

    In the Edo period, the god of pestilence appeared as an old woman who, supposedly, had conversations with actual living persons. One such example is an occurrence at the home of the warrior Nozaki Yasuke in my home town in Okayama Prefecture. “One day, an old beggar woman stood in front of the gate. When my wife gave her some coins, she said that s...

    Then, a groundbreaking idea for prevention emerged. A doctor named Hashimoto Hakuju (unknown–1831) explained that quarantining, not spells, prevented contagion, but today he is largely forgotten. In Dandoku-ron (Treatise on eliminating poisons, 1810) and Kokuji dandoku-ron (Treatise on eliminating poisons, Japanese script version, 1813), Hashimoto ...

    At the time of the Spanish flu (influenza) in the Taisho period (1912–26), the Japanese government, specifically, the Ministry of Home Affairs, adopted a policy that ignored the advice about appropriate distancing. In the United States, the city of Los Angeles “enacted new regulations as part of a package of emergency measures to prohibit all publi...

    Japan has narrowly overcome the first wave of COVID-19 with the help of perseverance on the ground and a high awareness of hygiene among the people of Japan, rather than through government measures. However, it will be tough to counter a second wave. It is one thing if a vaccine is made available on time, but most Japanese people are not immune and...

  5. Feb 12, 2016 · The term, Hashimoto's disease, is more widely used than ever. In part, the eponym reflects the realization that what Hakaru Hashimoto described is actually a form of autoimmune disease that can present not only as goiter but also as a shrunken, poorly functioning thyroid gland.

  6. Jan 1, 2017 · Hakaru Hashimoto was born in Iga Ueno, Mie Prefecture, Japan, 1881. He was the third child in a family whose members, including his father, practiced medicine for several generations. He spent his school years at Tsu and wished to become a politician.

  7. Jan 1, 2015 · Hashimoto returned to Japan and joined his alma mater for a short time. However, due to financial pressures, he soon decided to move back to his hometown to take over the family practice [ 1 ]. He began his surgical practice in the spring of 1916 at the age of 35 years.

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