70 years working together for health : The World Health Organization and the Republic of Korea

Page 38

CHAPTER

1: 1946–1960

4. Summary

W

ith the end of the Second World War, the international community sought a new international order and established the United Nations to promote peace and stability. Nevertheless, the Cold War soon divided the world into two camps – the capitalist camp led by the United States and Western Europe, and the communist camp led by the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Eastern Europe and the People’s Republic of China. In 1948, WHO was founded, an international organization focused on health issues. Korea celebrated its liberation from Japanese colonial rule in 1945, with the end of the Second World War. However, the country suffered a chaotic period as a result of the Cold War, with the Korean Peninsula divided into a communist north and democratic, capitalist south, which eventually led to a bloody and devastating three-year Korean War. Despite dire health and economic conditions, reconstruction efforts in the Republic of Korea slowly laid the foundation for an effective national health system.

In addition, Fang ensured that WHO provided the Government with support on policy and technical issues, as well as capacity-building necessary to establish the foundation for a national public health system. Actions included a proposal for the tuberculosis control programme (1953), support for strengthening the National Institute of Health (1955–1957), a proposal for malaria infection research and a malaria elimination programme (1958), support for clonorchiasis and paragonimiasis research and enhanced human resources in those areas (1958–1960), the provision of advisers and capacity-building in human resources for MCH (1950–1959), and support for a leprosy control project (1960).

In 1952, I.C. Fang, the first WHO Regional Director for the Western Pacific, visited the Republic of Korea to assess the health situation, form a health advisory group jointly with UNKRA and plan a public health centre revitalization project, which was proposed to the Government.

© WHO/Jean Mohr

Even before the formal formation of a sovereign government, officials in what was to become the Republic of Korea actively pursued WHO membership by dispatching observers to international health meetings. The nation officially joined WHO on 17 August 1949, becoming a Member State of the Western Pacific Region. On 1 September 1951, WHO and the Government of the Republic of Korea concluded a basic agreement that clarified the roles and responsibilities of each party for the development of health services in the Republic of Korea.

QQ Kim Yong-shik of the Republic of Korea addressed the Twelfth World Health Assembly in Geneva in May 1959, following the presentation of the WHO Director-General’s report.

22  70 years working together for health – the World Health Organization and the Republic of Korea


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Articles inside

InDex

15min
pages 202-212

References

6min
pages 164-168

5. Summary

1min
page 156

3.3 Support to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea through WHO

3min
pages 152-153

3.2 Noncommunicable disease control

2min
page 151

2.5 WHO office in the Republic of Korea

1min
page 146

References

4min
pages 133-136

2.3 WHO Regional Committee for the Western Pacific

1min
page 144

1.2 Situation in the Republic of Korea

3min
pages 141-142

2.4 WHO Executive Board

1min
page 145

6. Biographies

10min
pages 126-132

5. Summary

1min
page 125

3.5 Improvement of the national health statistics system

2min
page 121

3.4 Environmental health

2min
page 120

3.2 Development of human resources for health

1min
page 118

References

7min
pages 99-104

3.3 Communicable and noncommunicable disease control

1min
page 119

2.3 Participation in WHO Executive Board

2min
pages 111-112

1.2 Situation in the Republic of Korea

3min
pages 107-108

6. Biographies

10min
pages 93-98

5. Summary

2min
page 92

3.5 Environmental health

3min
pages 86-87

2.3 Survey of the national health situation

2min
pages 54-55

3.6 Other WHO support activities

3min
pages 88-89

3.2 Development of human resources for health

17min
pages 66-75

3.4 The maternal and child health programme

2min
page 85

3.3 Communicable disease control

13min
pages 76-84

2.2 WHO Regional Committee for the Western Pacific

3min
pages 52-53

4. Summary

2min
page 38

References

5min
pages 43-46

3.3 Communicable disease control

9min
pages 31-36

5. Biographies

8min
pages 39-42

1.2 Situation in the Republic of Korea

4min
pages 49-50

3.4 Maternal and child health

1min
page 37

1.2 Situation in the Republic of Korea

5min
pages 20-23

2.2 Conclusion of basic agreement and discussion of priorities with WHO

1min
page 28
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