Begley's medical career.

Many times, bagley is more like a warm and brave doctor. When he was still in Zhaotong, he began to treat people with simple knowledge of western medicine and distribute medicines. The home of a British missionary in Zhaotong became a local western medicine hospital.

After entering Miao township and winning the battle with local wizards, Shimenkan's pharmacy was originally located in the "five-pound hut" where they lived. This drugstore has become as busy as churches and schools. After each service, a steady stream of people come to the drugstore for consultation. His wife usually wraps the powder in a paper bag, and the liquid medicine is poured into half an egg shell for people who come to seek medical treatment.

Begley even grows vaccinia for local people. He specially brought a batch of small blades and vaccines from his hometown. When he can't take care of himself, he runs a training class. Soon, those missionaries and teachers who were selected became vaccinators, carrying enviable shiny and sharp knives and enthusiastically vaccinating Miao people everywhere. "Baglai personally treated the Miao people with pustules, and even leprosy was not afraid." This was recorded by Miao people when the working group of Guizhou Province visited Shimenkan on 1957.

Lepers used to be an excluded group. 19 14, after hearing the news that the governor of Guangxi trapped and killed the lepers who were buried alive, bagley angrily condemned them in newspapers and magazines, and an anti-leprosy organization in Britain quickly contacted him and remitted some money. Bagh used the money to buy food and cloth, which were distributed to patients nearby regularly. After his death, the church's moral responsibility to leprosy patients continued. Four years later, his successor, Zhang Daohui, applied for funds from missionary groups and bought a wasteland with water nearby. The earliest leprosy hospitals in northeast Yunnan and northwest Guizhou soon accepted dozens of leprosy patients in Zhaotong, Weining and Yiliang. Many patients dragged the rotting bodies, and after receiving treatment, they lived a collective life here. This leprosy village is still there today.

1927, Shimenkan produced the first Miao doctor of medicine: Wu Xingchun. What is even more rare is that after receiving his doctorate, Dr. Wu resolutely gave up urban life and returned to Shimenkan to set up civilian hospitals, carry out traditional Chinese medicine treatment and western medicine surgery, set up nursing schools to train nurses and popularize rural health education.