Gonorrhea in China: shaping medical knowledge and transforming public perceptions
Peng Miao

TL;DR
This paper explores how medical knowledge and public perceptions of gonorrhea in China have evolved over time, from traditional views to modern understandings as a sexually transmitted disease.
Contribution
The paper provides a novel historical analysis of the transformation of gonorrhea-related knowledge and public perceptions in China.
Findings
Gonorrhea transitioned from being viewed as a traditional illness to a recognized sexually transmitted disease.
Public perceptions shifted from seeing gonorrhea as an individual ailment to understanding it as a social issue.
Medical education evolved from general to sex-oriented approaches regarding gonorrhea.
Abstract
Sexually transmitted infections (STIs) have been a persistent global challenge, with gonorrhea, caused by the bacterium Neisseria gonorrhoeae, remaining an enduring threat. Despite its clinical and social importance, the historical evolution of gonorrhea-related knowledge and public perceptions in China have received limited scholarly attention. This paper addresses this gap by analyzing two interconnected threads: first, the formulation of medical knowledge, encompassing Traditional Chinese Medicine’s (TCM) understanding of linzheng (淋证) and Western medicine’s definition of gonorrhea; second, the evolution of public perceptions, shifting from endogenous pathology to exogenous risk. This study reveals how gonorrhea transitioned from being understood as a traditional illness to being recognized as a sexually transmitted disease, from being part of general medical education to becoming a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReproductive tract infections research · Yersinia bacterium, plague, ectoparasites research · Herpesvirus Infections and Treatments
