Hong Kong Med J 2014;20:86–7 | Number 1, February 2014
© Hong Kong Academy of Medicine. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
REMINISCENCE: ARTEFACTS FROM THE HONG KONG MUSEUM OF MEDICAL SCIENCES
An unusual graduation certificate
SC Tso, FHKAM (Medicine)
Director and Member of Education and Research Committee, Hong Kong Museum of Medical Sciences Society
This graduation certificate (Figure 1) earns a place in
the history of medicine in Hong Kong as it sheds a
little light on a period with scant written records. It
is also unique as it was ranked number one among
a dozen or so certificates awarded to the only
graduating class of nurses by the occupying Japanese
administration in Hong Kong.
Figure 1. Certificate of Graduation from Nursing School of the Civil Hospital during the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong, kindly donated to the Hong Kong Museum of Medical Sciences by the awardee in 2000
Japan invaded Hong Kong on 8 December 1941, the
same day Pearl Harbour was attacked. During the
defensive battle that lasted till Christmas day, all
hospitals were mobilised to care for war casualties
which kept all staff busy well after hostilities ended
with Hong Kong’s surrender on 25 December 1941.
The Japanese occupying forces took over the two
large hospitals, Queen Mary Hospital on the island
and Kowloon Hospital on the peninsula, for military
use. The Alice Ho Miu Ling Nethersole Hospital and the Tung
Wah Group of Hospitals were available to serve
civilians. Nethersole was renamed Civic Hospital
under a Japanese medical superintendent, while the
medical and nursing duties continued to be provided
by the local Chinese. Despite, or perhaps because of,
the harsh and difficult conditions in the territory at
the time when malnutrition and infectious diseases
were rampant, the need was felt to continue the
training of nurses, and Nethersole was possibly the
only hospital at that time where formal training for
nurse probationers was provided. The first class was
recruited in 1942 and included 12 trainees for the
3-year course. Except for a Japanese doctor teaching
materia medica, all instructors were Chinese doctors
who were Hong Kong University graduates. However,
all trainees were also required to study the Japanese
language as part of the course. Ward staff worked under the watchful eye of Japanese supervisors,
one appointed for each ward. Food was scarce, and
rice rationing for both staff and patients was strictly
enforced. All the hardships notwithstanding, training
and clinical work went apace smoothly without
much interference from the Japanese administration,
though not without some sense of apprehension. All
probationers of the first class graduated in August
1945. Ironically, the graduation celebrations took
place on 15 August, the day that Japan surrendered
and, consequently, the celebration took on an added
and increased significance.
The author is grateful to the recipient of the
certificate, Ms Chan Wing Han (Figure 2), for
much of the information. Ms Chan, whose father
was one of first class of graduates from the medical
school of the University of Hong Kong, intended
to study medicine at the Peking Union Medical
College but her pursuit was thwarted by the Sino-
Japanese war that broke out in 1937. She graduated
from the first nurse probationers’ course under the
Japanese administration and her certificate was
marked number one, likely reflecting her standing
in the examination. After the resumption of British
administration in Hong Kong, her training was
recognised and she was allowed to sit the Hong
Kong Nursing Board examination to qualify as
a registered nurse without further training. She
continued to work in the Nethersole after the war
and was appointed Matron in 1961. She served as
Chief Nursing Administrator of Alice Ho Miu Ling
Nethersole and United Christian Hospitals from
1974 till her retirement in 1980. She now resides in
Toronto, Canada.
Figure 2. Picture taken in December 2007 of the awardee, Ms Grace Chan Wing Han, beside the certificate, in front of Museum exhibits on the Alice Ho Miu Ling Nethersole Hospital
Sources
1. Paterson EH. A Hospital for Hong Kong—The Centenary History of the Alice Ho Miu Ling Nethersole Hospital.
Hong Kong: Alice Ho Miu Ling Nethersole Hospital; 1987.
2. Ho FC, Tso SC. Chan Wing Han Grace—Biographical notes. Archives of Hong Kong Museum of Medical Sciences.