© Hong Kong Academy of Medicine. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
REMINISCENCE: ARTEFACTS FROM THE HONG KONG MUSEUM OF MEDICAL SCIENCES
Dr Kok-cheang Yeo (1903–2004): the first Chinese Director of Medical and Health Services in Hong Kong
TW Wong, FHKAM (Emergency Medicine); Moira Chan-Yeung, FRCP, FRCPC
Members, Education and Research Committee, Hong Kong Museum of Medical Sciences Society
Dr Kok-cheang Yeo (楊國璋, 1903–2004) [MB, BS,
MD, DPH, DTM&H, CMG] diligently served in
Hong Kong’s Medical Department for 30 years. He
remained in Hong Kong during the Second World
War, prioritising the good of the community over his
personal safety. After the war, he effectively fought
infectious diseases, notably tuberculosis (TB).
Born in Penang, Malaysia in 1903, Yeo received
his medical education from The University of Hong
Kong (HKU), graduating in 1925, before earning a
diploma in public health (DPH) with distinction
from University of Cambridge and a diploma in
tropical medicine and hygiene (DTM&H) from
Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine in the United
Kingdom. In 1928, he joined the government’s
Medical Department.1 Two years later, he completed
his medical degree in state medicine at HKU and by
1939 was a senior Chinese Health Officer.2
At the request of the then Director of Medical
Services Dr Percy Selwyn Selwyn-Clarke, Yeo
stayed in Japanese-occupied Hong Kong rather than
escaping to Free China. Selwyn-Clarke, with the
approval of the Colonial Secretary, had chosen to
work with the Japanese to maintain public health and
prevent epidemics, though the director anticipated
his own imprisonment at any time. Yeo was Selwyn-Clarke’s most trusted Chinese Health Officer and
also the most experienced and knowledgeable with
regards to fighting infectious diseases.
Selwyn-Clarke’s worries were proved right
in 1943 when he was arrested, tortured, and
imprisoned for spying. Similarly, Yeo was detained
in solitary confinement and interrogated daily for 2
months. After his release, Yeo continued to maintain
public health in Hong Kong, though he was paid only
a small sack of rice to feed a family of five for the
duration of the occupation. His family survived by
growing vegetables in the backyard of their rented
house.3
In the postwar era, Yeo demonstrated his
remarkable skills as a leader and administrator.
In early 1946, the Medical Department initiated
several programmes aimed at preventing infectious
diseases, including smallpox and cholera, as well
as an anti-malaria programme. The following year,
as the Medical Department’s Deputy Director of Health, Yeo implemented these programmes.
The smallpox vaccination campaign immunised
>1 million residents annually for several years;
consequently, Hong Kong’s last recorded cases of the
disease were in 1952.4 Every year before the summer,
the department launched a city-wide anti-cholera
inoculation and education campaign and imposed
strict quarantine measures to prevent a severe
outbreak.5 6 There was no major outbreak of cholera
during his time at the helm.
Yeo was promoted to Deputy Director of
Medical and Health Services in 1950 and Director
in 1952—the first Chinese to be appointed to this
role.7 In addition to continuing the infectious disease
prevention policies, he proposed compulsory
treatment for individuals with venereal diseases to
counter the high incidence after the war. The Venereal
Disease Ordinance was passed in 1951, providing free
consultation and treatment for affected individuals.8
All pregnant women were screened for syphilis, and
as a result, congenital syphilis all but disappeared
within a few years. Moreover, Yeo instigated the use
of the combined immunisation against diphtheria,
whooping cough and tetanus; by the 1970s, cases of
these diseases were unheard of in Hong Kong.9
Under Yeo’s directorship, the government’s
Tuberculosis Service, in conjunction with the
Ruttonjee Sanatorium, began administering the
Bacilli Calmette–Guerin vaccination in 1952.10
Incidence of TB was high after the war; in children,
tuberculous meningitis accounted for 22% of all TB
deaths. However, by the late 1960s, 95% of newborns
and children had received the Bacilli Calmette–Guerin vaccine, drastically reducing fatalities from
tuberculous meningitis.11 In fact, the TB mortality
rate more than halved under Yeo’s supervision,
from 208 per 100 000 in 1951 to 97 per 100 000 in
1957 when he retired. During the same period,
the TB notification rate declined from 689 to 499
per 100 000.12 When effective drugs became more
readily available and outpatient treatment possible,
Yeo organised more TB clinics to meet the need.13
Prior to Yeo’s leadership, leprosy had been
neglected by the medical profession and the people
of Hong Kong.14 15 However, Yeo helped the non-governmental organisation The Leprosy Mission Hong Kong Auxiliary establish a leper colony and hospital on Hay Ling Chau, a small island off Lantau Island.
When the Medical Department had access to
more resources in the 1950s, Yeo improved existing
outpatient facilities and added new ones, including
the Wan Chai Clinic on Hong Kong Island; Shek Kip
Mei Clinic in Kowloon; and Tsuen Wan Clinic, Sai
Kung Clinic, North Lamma Island Clinic, and Silver
Mine Bay Dispensary in the New Territories and
outlying islands.16 Under his influence, Tung Wah
Hospital expanded its outpatient department with a
new annex in 1956.17 Urgently required hospitals were
built during Yeo’s tenure, including the new Tsan Yuk
Hospital (Fig), Duchess of Kent Children’s Hospital,
Grantham Hospital, and the aforementioned
leprosarium on Hay Ling Chau. Additionally, he
established the position of a specialist anaesthetist,
paving the way for the development of that speciality
locally.18
Figure. Dr Kok-cheang Yeo (right), then Hong Kong Governor Sir Alexander Grantham (centre), and Prof Gordon King (left) at the opening of the new Tsan Yuk Hospital in Sai Ying Pun in 1955. Photo donated by Prof Gordon King to the Hong Kong Museum of Medical Sciences
In recognition of Yeo’s tireless efforts to
improve Hong Kong’s public health, the Tung Wah
Hospital Board of Directors named a hospital wing
after him. Furthermore, he was awarded Companion
of the Most Distinguished Order of Saint Michael and
Saint George (CMG) in 1956 and made an honorary
member of the British Red Cross Society. Yeo was
appointed part-time Professor of Social Medicine
at HKU, a position he retained until he retired to
England with his family in 1957. There, he worked as
a psychiatrist at St Ebba’s Hospital in Epsom, Surrey
for 10 years. Yeo died in 2004, aged 101.1
Many in the Medical Department credit Yeo’s
success to his skilled administration. He can be
summed up thus: as ‘a leader who has been long
the guide of our destiny, a leader we all respect for
his humble sincerity of purpose, his courage and
devotion to duty, his fairness and loyalty to his
staff, his unassuming painstaking and conscientious
leadership’.19
References
1. Clement-Jones family–person sheet. Available from: http://www.clement-jones.com/ps02/ps02_372.html. 2011 Jul 27. Accessed 3 Oct 2024.
2. Hong Kong Government. Hong Kong Blue Book for the Year 1939.
3. Yeo F. My Memories. Pittsburgh (PA): Dorrance Publishing; 1994: 69-103.
4. Lee SH. Prevention and Control of Communicable Diseases in Hong Kong, Government Printer; 1994: 43-5.
5. Hong Kong Government. Report of the Director of Medical Services for 1947: 11.
6. Anti-cholera campaign. South China Morning Post 1951 Jul 20.
7. New Director. Appointment for Dr. K.C. Yeo. Medical Services. South China Morning Post 1952 Jan 14.
8. Infectious contacts. Government measures for control of venereal disease. Compulsory treatment. South China Morning Post 1951 Dec 20.
9. Lee SH. Prevention and control of communicable diseases in Hong Kong. Government Printer; 1994: 19-22.
10. Hong Kong SAR Government. Tuberculosis control in Hong Kong. Available from: https://www.info.gov.hk/tb_chest/doc/TBcon.pdf. Accessed 23 Feb 2022.
11. Tuberculosis and Chest Service, Public Health Services Branch, Centre for Health Protection, Department of Health,
Hong Kong SAR Government. Tuberculosis Manual. 2006: 105-11.
12. Department of Health, Hong Kong SAR Government. Annual Report on Tuberculosis & Chest Service 2020.
Available from: https://www.info.gov.hk/tb_chest/doc/Annual_Report_2020.pdf. Accessed 25 Sep 2024.
13. New T.B., dental clinic. To be opened by Dr. the Hon K.C. Yeo at Kennedy Road next month. South China Morning Post 1954 Mar 19.
14. Mission to Lepers. Flag Day appeal broadcast by Dr. The Hon K. C. Yeo. Work on Hay Ling Chau. South China Morning Post 1956 Mar 24.
15. Mo M. The legacy of Dr Kok Cheang Yeo, the first Chinese Director of Medical and Health Services of Hong Kong. J R Asiat Soc Hong Kong Branch 2014;54:181-94.
16. Chan-Yeung M. A Medical History of Hong Kong: The Development and Contributions of Outpatient Clinics. Hong
Kong: The Chinese University of Hong Kong Press; 2021: 92-3. Crossref
17. Tung Wah Hospital. New annex to outpatient department opened. South China Morning Post 1956 Mar 30.
18. Lett Z. Obituary, Dr. Kok Cheang Yeo, CMG, MD, DPH, DTM & H. Hong Kong College of Anaesthesiologists,
Newsletter 2004;Sep: 30-1.
19. Medical Department. Presentation honouring the Hon. Dr K. C. Yeo. Brilliant administrator. South China Morning Post 1957 Jun 27.