Band-Aid was actually invented by the United States in 1920
Here is a webpage, but because it is in English, I used a machine to translate it into Chinese. Please help me with the translation. See original page.
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Who hasn’t used a Band-Aid? In a world full of rips, scrapes, water and bruises, it seems difficult to imagine not having those The longevity of small adhesive bandages. They certainly come in handy on a cleft finger. They're even handy on a cleft foot, although it sounds slightly funny.
Of course, there are always tears and scrapes, but there are not always adhesive bandages there. This fact was painfully clear to a young housewife named Josephine Dickson.
Back in 1920, this newlywed was living in New Brunswick, New Jersey, with her husband Earle, and although married, she had no family affairs. When Earle came home from his job as a cotton buyer in Johnson & Johnson, Josephine would always have dinner on the table. Unfortunately, she will also have some cracks on her fingers. Without an adhesive bandage, Josephine had no easy way of bandaging her own rip. Earle had to cut pieces of adhesive tape and cotton gauze for each wound and form a bandage. This happened day after day - and day after day, Josephine needed more bandages. They are in a real bond.
Finally, weeks after the kitchen accident, Earle hit upon an idea. (Fortunately for Jensen, his idea was to not go out and hire a cook.) No, Earle did this by placing squares of cotton tulle at intervals along strips of adhesive and containing them with crinoline They sat down and prepared some ready-made bandages. All Josephine had to do now was take a length of the cleft strip and wrap it over her cleft. To a certain extent, it is the one responsible for the invention; the branded adhesive bandage.
Earle soon told his boss at work about his new invention, and soon the first adhesive bandage was being produced and sold under the world's famous Band Aid trademark. Earle ended up being rewarded with a gesture as vice president of the company, where he stayed until his retirement. Regarding Josephine, medical history does not record whether she ever conquered the art of accident-free cooking. But we do know that she had plenty of OK bandages; just branded and effective adhesive bandages just in case. Earle Dickson could not have known what he was inventing, but it undoubtedly had an edge product attached nearby.
With-Aid & Ordinary Fire Seal Timeline displays interesting facts about its use throughout the medical history.
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