Masayuki Kawamura

Masayuki Kawamura (河村 正之, Kawamura Masayuki, May 1, 1878 July 28, 1933) was a Japanese physician who worked at Kikuchi Keifuen Sanatorium between 1909 and 1933. He was the first physician-director of the sanatorium which like other public sanitoriums would normally have been run by police officials from local stations.

Masayuki Kawamura
BornMay 1, 1878
DiedJuly 28, 1933 (1933-07-29) (aged 55)
NationalityJapan
OccupationPhysician
Known forThe first director of Kikuchi Keifuen Sanatorium (1909 -), Studies on leprosy

Life and work

Masayuki Kawamura was born in Fukuoka Prefecture on May 1, 1878. He graduated from Tokyo University and in 1909 he became the first director of Kikuchi Keifuen Sanatorium on the recommendation of Prof. Masanori Ogata of the department of Sanitary Sciences at Tokyo University. In 1926-7, he traveled to Fjerritslev in Denmark, visiting various places including a trip to the Bergen Sanatorium in Norway. He was awarded a Doctorate from Kumamoto University in 1932. He died suddenly of penetrating peritonitis during a visit to the Tsuetate hot spring in Kumamoto Prefecture on July 28, 1933.

Papers and presentations

The following were by Masayuki Kawamura:

  • "The use of Tetrodotoxin in leprosy" (1912). Kawamura M et al. Chizei Ikai Jiho, 141.[1]
  • "On the leprosy settlement (Honmyoji buraku) in Kumamoto" (1933). Kawamura M, Uchida M, Shimose H. Repura 4,1,228.[2]
    • Discussed were various problems such as why leprosy patients gathered there, on the ease of life of leprosy patients. Leprosy patients probably gathered in the Kyōhō years or 1716-1735.
  • "On the treatment of leprosy as a social problem". Kawamura M, Uchida M. Repura. Kawamra M, et al. Repura, 4,1.[3]
    • The biggest problem is that even if leprosy clears, the patient has not been treated normally by the presence of leprosy stigma. At present, a clinical complete cure is necessary.
  • "Studies on murine leprosy: effects of chaulmoogra oil" (1932). 5th Leprosy Congress at Osaka.
  • "Studies on murine leprosy: pathological differences from human leprosy" (1932). 5th Leprosy Congress at Osaka.
  • "Studies on murine leprosy: relations between the amount of inoculated bacteria and lesions" (1932). 5th Leprosy Congress at Osaka.
  • "Studies on murine leprosy: Mitsuda reaction" (1932). 5th Leprosy Congress at Osaka.

Personal life

He was sincere and was popular among leprosy patients. He liked Waka (poetry), Haiku, Japanese calligraphy and drawing pictures and enjoyed waka and haiku with patients. When he died suddenly, patients composed many Bon Buddhist dance songs.

gollark: I like how occasionally quirks of conversations make me seem prescient.
gollark: I wouldn't blame you, really, but still.
gollark: Did you not read the assembly?
gollark: The school establishment.
gollark: It is being held in reserve as a contingency in case they are irritating wrt. phones.

References

  1. The use of Tetrodotoxin in leprosy (1912) Kawamura M et al. Chizei IIkai Jiho, 141.
  2. "On the leprosy settlement (Honmyoji buraku) in Kumamoto" (1933). Kawamura M, Uchida M, Shimose H. Repura 4,1,228.
  3. "On the treatment of leprosy as a social problem". Kawamura M, Uchida M. Repura. Kawamra M, et al. Repura, 4,1.
Sources
  • 100 years of Kikuchi Keifuen (Hyakunen no seiso) (2009), Kikuchi Keifuen.
  • 50 years of Kikuchi Keifuen (1960), Kikuchi Keifuen.
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