1.Suitability and Readability Assessment of Printed Educational Materials on Hypertension.
Tae Wha LEE ; Soo Jin KANG ; Hye Hyun KIM ; So Ra WOO ; Sinhye KIM
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2011;41(3):333-343
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to assess the suitability and readability of printed educational materials for patients with hypertension in Korea. METHODS: A total of 33 written educational materials related to hypertension were collected from public health centers, hospitals, and internet web site. Among them, we analyzed 19 materials which fit the inclusion criteria: leaflets (n=9), booklets (n=3), and guide book (n=7). Two trained nurses evaluate the materials using suitability assessment tool (SAM; Doak, Doak, & Root, 1996a) and graded lexical items for teaching Korean (Kim, 2003). RESULTS: Overall, 14 (73.7%) of 19 materials scored adequate, and 5 (26.3%) scored inadequate. On the average, the education materials contained 36.1% to 50.5% of 1st grade reading level words and 12.9% to 21.6% of 4th grade level and over. CONCLUSION: The reading level of the materials was higher than a 6th grade reading level. It is proposed that the written educational materials should be developed by health professionals according to suitability and quality by taking the target group's literacy capacity into consideration.
Cultural Diversity
;
Humans
;
Hypertension/*prevention & control/psychology
;
Needs Assessment
;
*Pamphlets
;
Patient Education as Topic/*methods/standards
;
Reading
;
Teaching Materials/*standards
2.Needs assessment for developing teaching competencies of medical educators.
Korean Journal of Medical Education 2015;27(3):177-186
PURPOSE: This study conducted a needs assessment for developing teaching competencies of medical educators by assessing their perceived ability to perform teaching competencies as well as their perceived importance of these competencies. Additionally, this study examined whether there were any differences in needs assessments scores among three faculty groups. METHODS: Hundred and eighteen professors from Dong-A University College of Medicine were surveyed, and the data from 44 professors who answered all the questions were analyzed using IBM SPSS 21. The needs assessment tool measured participants' perceived ability to perform teaching competencies and perceived importance of these competencies. The Borich formula was used to calculate needs assessment scores. RESULTS: The most urgent needs for faculty development were identified for the teaching competencies of "diagnosis and reflection," followed by "test and feedback," and "facilitation." Additionally, two, out of 51, items with the highest needs assessment scores were "developing a thorough course syllabus" and "introducing students to the course syllabus on the first day of class." The assistant professor group scored significantly higher on educational needs related to "facilitation," "affection and concern for students," and "respect for diversity" competencies than the professor group. Furthermore, the educational needs scores for all the teaching competencies except "diagnosis and reflection," "global mindset," and "instructional management" were higher for the assistant professor group than the other two faculty groups. CONCLUSION: Thus, the educational needs assessment scores obtained in this study can be used as criteria for designing and developing faculty development programs for medical educators.
*Education, Medical
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Faculty, Medical/*standards
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Female
;
Humans
;
*Needs Assessment/standards
;
*Professional Competence
;
Republic of Korea
;
Schools, Medical
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Teaching/*standards
;
Universities
3.A New Disability-related Health Care Needs Assessment Tool for Persons With Brain Disorders.
Yoon KIM ; Sang June EUN ; Wan Ho KIM ; Bum Suk LEE ; Ja Ho LEIGH ; Jung Eun KIM ; Jin Yong LEE
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2013;46(5):282-290
OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to develop a health needs assessment (HNA) tool for persons with brain disorders and to assess the unmet needs of persons with brain disorders using the developed tool. METHODS: The authors used consensus methods to develop a HNA tool. Using a randomized stratified systematic sampling method adjusted for sex, age, and districts, 57 registered persons (27 severe and 30 mild cases) with brain disorders dwelling in Seoul, South Korea were chosen and medical specialists investigated all of the subjects with the developed tools. RESULTS: The HNA tool for brain disorders we developed included four categories: 1) medical interventions and operations, 2) assistive devices, 3) rehabilitation therapy, and 4) regular follow-up. This study also found that 71.9% of the subjects did not receive appropriate medical care, which implies that the severity of their disability is likely to be exacerbated and permanent, and the loss irrecoverable. CONCLUSIONS: Our results showed that the HNA tool for persons with brain disorders based on unmet needs defined by physicians can be a useful method for evaluating the appropriateness and necessity of medical services offered to the disabled, and it can serve as the norm for providing health care services for disabled persons. Further studies should be undertaken to increase validity and reliability of the tool. Fundamental research investigating the factors generating or affecting the unmet needs is necessary; its results could serve as basis for developing policies to eliminate or alleviate these factors.
Adult
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Aged
;
Brain Diseases/*physiopathology
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Disabled Persons/rehabilitation/*statistics & numerical data
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Female
;
Health Services Needs and Demand/*statistics & numerical data
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Needs Assessment/*standards
4.Predictors of Nursing Service Need for Nursing Homes Residents.
Tae Wha LEE ; Soon Yung CHO ; Yoon Kyung JANG
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2009;39(1):95-106
PURPOSE: The purposes of this study were to explore the functional status of elderly residents and to analyze time use, and finally identify factors to predict nursing care needs in relation to functional status and health related variables. METHODS: In this study a descriptive-correlational design was used. Functional status of participants was obtained through interviews, and nursing care time was examined using a 1 min time-motion study with a standardized instrument developed by Korea Long-Term Care Planning Committee (2005). RESULTS: The mean total functional score was 65 (range 28-125) and mean total nursing care time was 144.15 min per day. There were significant positive relationships between total nursing care time, marital status, back pain, dementia, and vision impairment. Multiple regression analyses showed that a liner combination of number of illnesses, types of primary disease, ADL, IADL, cognitive function, nursing demand, and rehabilitation demand explained 42.8% of variance of total nursing time. ADL (beta=-.533) was the most significant predictor of nursing service need. CONCLUSION: Identifying factors that result in variations of service need has implications for adequate nursing service, estimation of optimum nurse to patient ratio, quality of care and patient safety.
Activities of Daily Living
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Aged
;
Aged, 80 and over
;
Female
;
Geriatric Assessment
;
*Health Services Needs and Demand
;
Health Status
;
Humans
;
Interviews as Topic
;
Male
;
*Needs Assessment
;
*Nursing Homes
;
*Nursing Services/standards
;
Predictive Value of Tests
;
Quality of Health Care
;
Questionnaires
5.Knowledge and Learning Needs Related to Cancer Treatment in Gynecological Cancer Patients.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2006;36(6):942-949
PURPOSE: This study was to investigate the knowledge and learning needs of chemotherapy in gynecological cancer patients. METHOD: The subjects consisted of 103 gynecological cancer patients receiving chemotherapy from April 2005 to August 2005. Data was collected using a questionnaire about knowledge and learning needs of chemotherapy. The data was analyzed by t-test, ANOVA, Scheffe test, and Pearson's correlation coefficient using SAS. RESULT: Average scores of knowledge and learning needs of general treatment and care were 2.74, and 3.30 respectively. Average score of knowledge and learning needs of chemotherapy were 2.54, and 3.23 respectively. Learning needs of general treatment and care and of chemotherapy were significantly different in relation to marital status, educational level, family support, the operation, and the amount of chemotherapy received. Items with the highest level of learning needs were the symptoms of recurring illness of general treatment, and minimizing side effects of chemotherapy. There were a negative correlation between knowledge and learning needs on general treatment and a positive correlation between knowledge and learning needs on chemothearpy but there were not significant statistically. CONCLUSION: The level of learning needs related to cancer treatment was high, whereas, that of knowledge was low. Therefore, when designing an educational program for gynecological cancer patients, understanding of learning needs is necessary. Also, consideration of a patient's characteristics, and a systematic and detailed educational program should be provided.
Adult
;
Aged
;
Demography
;
Female
;
Genital Neoplasms, Female/*drug therapy/psychology
;
Humans
;
*Knowledge
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*Learning
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Middle Aged
;
Needs Assessment
;
*Patient Education as Topic
;
Program Development/standards
;
Questionnaires
;
Translating
6.Validity assessment and determination of the cutoff value for the Index of Complexity, Outcome and Need among 12-13 year-olds in Southern Chinese.
Zheng-Yu LIAO ; Fan JIAN ; Hu LONG ; Yun LU ; Yan WANG ; Zhi YANG ; Yu-Wei HE ; Peter WAMALWA ; Jing WANG ; Nian-Song YE ; Sheng WANG ; Wen-Li LAI
International Journal of Oral Science 2012;4(2):88-93
To validate the use of the Index of Complexity, Outcome and Need (ICON) in assessing orthodontic treatment need among 12-13 year-olds in southern China, we determined the threshold value of ICON based on Chinese orthodontists' judgments. The samples consisted of 335 students in grade 7 from 16 randomly selected middle schools in Chengdu, China. Three associate professors provided ICON scores for each participant and the results were compared with the gold standard judgments from 25 experts on treatment needs. Based on the gold standard, 195 casts belonged to the treatment category, while the rest 140 belonged to the no-treatment category. With the international cutoff point of 43, the sensitivity and specificity of the ICON score were 0.29 and 0.98.The best compromise between sensitivity and specificity in Chengdu, compared with the gold standard, was found at a cutoff point of 29, and the sensitivity and specificity were 0.88 and 0.83. When used to evaluate the treatment need of 12-13 year-olds in southern China, the international ICON cutoff value did not correspond well with Chinese orthodontists' judgments; a lower cutoff value of 29 offered a greater sensitivity and specificity with respect to expert orthodontists' perception of treatment need.
Adolescent
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Child
;
China
;
epidemiology
;
Cross-Cultural Comparison
;
Data Collection
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Dental Health Surveys
;
methods
;
standards
;
Female
;
Health Services Needs and Demand
;
statistics & numerical data
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Malocclusion
;
diagnosis
;
epidemiology
;
Needs Assessment
;
statistics & numerical data
;
Observer Variation
;
Orthodontics, Corrective
;
standards
;
statistics & numerical data
;
Reference Values
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Sensitivity and Specificity
7.Predictors of Tobacco-Control Activities of Community Health Practitioners: Report from a National Survey.
Jin Sun KIM ; Mee Suk SONG ; Hyun Ei OH
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2004;34(8):1443-1450
The involvement of health-care professionals in tobacco-control activities is essential to prevent smoking-related morbidity and mortality. The purposes of this predictive correlational study were to examine tobacco-control activities and to identify the predictors of such activities of community health practitioners (CHPs). Of the 1,813 members of the Korean Association of CHP, 1,247 participated in this study. A mailed survey was conducted to collect data. The majority of CHPs supported tobacco-control policies and recognized tobacco-control activities as an important role for them. Only 44.3% of CHPs were confident in their knowledge and skills regarding tobacco-control activities, and only 30.8% had received professional tobacco-control education. While the majority of the CHPs "asked, advised, and assessed"their clients, only a small number "assisted or arranged". The tobacco-control activities of CHPs were predicted by their attitude toward it, age, experience of tobacco-control education, educational level, and general perception of the risk of smoking; these variables accounted 13.5% of variance in the tobacco-control activities of CHPs. These findings provide the basis for developing a continuing education program for CHPs. CHPs should be encouraged to integrate tobacco-control activities into their routine practice, and CHP education programs should be adjusted to increase the time spent on the tobacco-control intervention techniques.
Adult
;
Aged
;
Analysis of Variance
;
*Attitude of Health Personnel
;
Clinical Competence/standards
;
Community Health Nursing/education/*organization & administration
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Education, Nursing, Continuing/standards
;
Educational Status
;
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Middle Aged
;
Needs Assessment
;
*Nurse's Role
;
Nursing Methodology Research
;
Nursing Staff/education/organization & administration/*psychology
;
Predictive Value of Tests
;
Questionnaires
;
Regression Analysis
;
Risk Factors
;
Self Efficacy
;
Smoking/*prevention & control
;
Smoking Cessation
8.A Q-methodological Study on Nursing Students' Attitudes toward Nursing Ethics.
Eun Ja YEUN ; Young Mi KWON ; Hung Kyu KIM
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2004;34(8):1434-1442
PURPOSE: Professional nursing ethics is a living, dynamic set of standards for nurses'professional moral behavior. Furthermore, in daily clinical nursing training, nursing students are constantly confronted with decisionmaking that is moral in nature. The aim of this study was to identify the perceived ethical attitudes in the clinical training process of senior nursing students using Q-methodology to offer basic strategies for nursing ethics education and thereby improve patients'care. METHODS: Q-methodology provides a scientific method for identifying perception structures that exist within certain individuals or groups. Thirty-seven participants in a university rated 38 selected Q-statements on a scale of 1-9. The collected data were analyzed using pc-QUNAL software. RESULTS: Principal component analysis identified 3 types of ethical attitudes in nursing students in Korea. The categories were labeled Sacred-life, Science-realistic and Humane-life. Sacred-life individuals think that a life belongs to an absolute power (God), not a man, and a human life is a high and noble thing. Science-realistic individuals disagreed that allowing an induced abortion or embryo (human) duplication is unethical behavior that provokes a trend, which takes the value of a life lightly; most of them took a utilitarian position with respect to ethical decisions. Humane-life individuals exhibit a tendency toward human-centered thought with respect to ethical attitudes. CONCLUSION: This study will be of interest to educators of students of nursing and hospital nursing administrators. Also, the findings may provide the basis for the development of more appropriate strategies to improve nursing ethics education programs.
Adaptation, Psychological
;
Analysis of Variance
;
*Attitude of Health Personnel/ethnology
;
Clinical Competence/standards
;
Decision Making
;
*Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate/ethics/standards
;
*Ethics, Nursing/education
;
Factor Analysis, Statistical
;
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
;
Humanism
;
Humans
;
Interprofessional Relations/ethics
;
Korea
;
Morals
;
Needs Assessment
;
Nursing Methodology Research/methods
;
Patient Rights/ethics
;
Philosophy, Nursing
;
*Q-Sort
;
Religion and Psychology
;
Students, Nursing/*psychology
;
Value of Life
9.A Study on Aggressive Behavior Among Nursing Home Residents with Cognitive Impairment.
Heeyoung OH ; Miran EOM ; Yunjung KWON
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2004;34(8):1451-1459
PURPOSE: With a sample of cognitively impaired nursing home residents and nursing staff, the following were examined 1) the proportion and nature of aggressive behavior, 2) the frequency and types of aggressive behavior, 3) the difference between the residents who demonstrate aggressive behavior and those who do not demonstrate aggressive behavior (age, mental status, functional status, and pain, length of nursing home stay), and 4) nursing staff responses to aggressive behavior by residents. METHODS: A cross-sectional descriptive study design was used. Data were collected from cognitively impaired nursing home residents (N=205) and nursing staff (N=60) at two nursing homes using Ryden Aggression Scale I and II, Mini-Mental State Exam, Modified Barthel Index, Verbal Descriptor Scale, and aggressive behavior management questionnaire. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics including t-test. RESULTS: About 62.9% residents were found to be aggressive and 38.5% were both physically and verbally aggressive. Pushing, making threatening gestures, hitting, slapping, cursing/obscene/vulgar languages, making verbal threats were occurred frequently. Aggressive residents were significantly older, had more cognitive impairment, had more pain, and stayed longer in the nursing home when compared with non-aggressive residents. Considerable proportion of nursing staff responded to aggressive behaviors inadequately. CONCLUSION: Aggressive behavior among cognitively impaired nursing home residents is prevalent thus needs to be prevented and reduced. Along with environmental modification, educational programs for nursing staff and family caregivers need to be developed and implemented so that they can have extensive knowledge and skills to manage aggressive behaviors.
Aged
;
Aged, 80 and over
;
*Aggression/psychology
;
Attitude of Health Personnel
;
Case-Control Studies
;
Clinical Competence/standards
;
Cognition Disorders/*complications/nursing
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Education, Nursing, Continuing
;
Female
;
Geriatric Assessment
;
Geriatric Nursing/education/organization & administration
;
Health Services Needs and Demand
;
Humans
;
Inservice Training
;
Korea/epidemiology
;
Male
;
Mental Competency
;
*Nursing Homes
;
Nursing Staff/education/psychology
;
Prevalence
;
Psychomotor Agitation/epidemiology/*etiology/prevention & control/psychology
;
Questionnaires
;
Risk Factors
10.The Role Adaptation Process of Head Nurses in the General Hospitals.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2004;34(8):1416-1426
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to identify the role adaptation process experienced by head nurses. METHODS: Data were collected from 10 head nurses with in-depth interviews about their actual experiences. All the interviews were recorded and transcribed. The collected data were analyzed by the grounded theory methodology of Strauss and Corbin. RESULTS: The core category was identified as "weighing and balancing," and the role adaptation process was divided into six stages by time sequence: inquiring, approaching to others, bringing people into their fold, working with conviction, avoiding conflicts, and settling. CONCLUSION: The results of this study yield useful information for top mangers of nursing to identify, by stages, the demands of the head nurses in their role adaptation process. The findings of this study contributes to developing programs that facilitates the head nurses' role adaptation.
*Adaptation, Psychological
;
Adult
;
*Attitude of Health Personnel/ethnology
;
Avoidance Learning
;
Conflict (Psychology)
;
Female
;
*Hospitals, General/organization & administration
;
Humans
;
Interprofessional Relations
;
Korea
;
Leadership
;
Models, Nursing
;
Models, Psychological
;
Needs Assessment
;
Nurse Administrators/education/organization & administration/*psychology
;
*Nurse's Role
;
Nursing Methodology Research
;
Nursing Staff, Hospital/organization & administration/psychology
;
Nursing, Supervisory/organization & administration
;
Philosophy, Nursing
;
Power (Psychology)
;
Professional Competence/standards
;
Qualitative Research
;
Questionnaires
;
Self Efficacy