1.Global warming and health.
Korean Journal of Medicine 2008;75(5):489-491
No abstract available.
Global Warming
2.Development of an online nursing leadership program for global health in the Western Pacific Region.
Jenniffer T. Paguio ; Mary Abigail A. Hernandez ; Sheila R. Bonito
Acta Medica Philippina 2024;58(12):48-55
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE
Global health highlights the transnational determinants, issues, and possible solutions for improving health outcomes. Addressing global health issues requires population-based approaches coupled with individualized healthcare across settings, including strategies for achieving health equity. Designing and implementing global health solutions requires competent nurse leaders who can facilitate multi-disciplinary collaborations, engage in policy development, and lead advocacies that support the global health agenda. Thus, this paper examined the stakeholder perspectives that informed the development of a leadership program on global health for nurse leaders in the Western Pacific Region (WPR).
METHODSThe study used a descriptive qualitative approach to generate key recommendations for a context-appropriate, multi-country capacity-building program for nurse leaders on global health. The Analysis Design, Development, Implementation, and Evaluation (ADDIE) model and reflexive approach were employed to guide the development of the training design. Twenty-five nurse leaders from World Health Organization Collaborating Centers (WHO-CC) in the Western Pacific participated. Qualitative data were collected from participant feedback and post-activity sessions throughout program implementation.
RESULTSThematic analysis of stakeholder data revealed that the program (1) capitalized on equipping nurse leaders with the concepts related to global health and developing competencies in leadership, policy engagement, and advocacy; (2) ensured learning strategies by having participants from varied contexts and experiences; and (3) reflected on the strengths and limitations of the use of the online platform.
CONCLUSIONThis paper contributed to the growing literature on global health and programs that support addressing global health issues. The findings underscored the urgent need to capacitate nurses in leadership positions who contribute to addressing emerging issues in global health. The paper recommended improvements in the design and implementation of the Global Health Nursing Leadership Program to engage more nurse leaders across the region and enhance content and delivery.
Global Health
3.Transient Global Amnesia Caused by Bilateral Medial Temporal-Lobe Infarction.
UnKyu YUN ; Inha HWANG ; Sang Won HA
Dementia and Neurocognitive Disorders 2017;16(4):132-133
No abstract available.
Amnesia, Transient Global*
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Infarction*
4.Transient Global Amnesia after Gastroscopy
Kyu On JUNG ; Hyeongsuk KIM ; Hye Jin MOON
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2018;36(3):241-242
No abstract available.
Amnesia, Transient Global
;
Gastroscopy
5.Global trends and regional differences in non-transport unintentional injuries mortality among children and adolescents, 1990 to 2019: results from the Global Burden of Disease 2019 study.
Yunfei LIU ; Yanhui DONG ; Xiaojin YAN ; Ning MA ; Jiajia DANG ; Jingshu ZHANG ; Panliang ZHONG ; Luo LI ; Zhiyong ZOU ; Yi SONG ; Jun MA
Chinese Medical Journal 2022;135(17):2056-2065
BACKGROUND:
Non-transport unintentional injuries (NTUIs) are major public concerns, especially among children and adolescents in low- and middle-income countries. With environmental and cognitive changes, a recent systematic description of global trends and regional differences concerning NTUIs is urgently needed for the global agenda of relevant policy-making and intervention target findings.
METHODS:
We used mortality, population, and socio-demographic-index (SDI) data from Global Burden of Disease 2019 to analyze the trends of NTUIs mortality. We applied the slope index of inequality (SII) and relative index of inequality (RII) to measure the absolute and relative inequality between countries and territories. The concentration curve and concentration index (CI) were also used to measure the inequality. We conducted a sensitivity analysis to make our findings credible.
RESULTS:
In 2019, there were 205,000 deaths due to NTUIs among children and adolescents aged 5 to 24 years, which decreased from 375,000 in 1990. In 2019, the age-standardized mortality rate (ASMR) was 8.13 per 100,000, ranging from the lowest in the Netherlands (0.90 per 100,000) to the highest in the Solomon Islands (29.34 per 100,000). The low-middle SDI group had the highest ASMR of NTUIs, while the low SDI group had the slowest decrease. After excluding the death caused by "exposure to forces of nature" and "other unintentional injuries", drowning accounted for the most deaths in almost every SDI group, gender, and age group, but the major causes of death varied in different subgroups. For example, animal contact was a major cause in low and low-middle SDI groups but less in high SDI groups, while high and high-middle SDI groups had a higher proportion of deaths for foreign body and poisonings. The SII showed a declining trend, but the RII and CI did not, which might indicate that inequality was persistent. Similar results were found in the sensitivity analysis.
CONCLUSIONS
Despite the declining trend of the mortality rate and the narrowing gap between countries, there were still a large number of children and adolescents dying from NTUIs, and those experiencing social-economic disadvantages remained at high mortality. Embedding the prevention of NTUIs into sustainable development goals might contribute to the progress of reducing death and inequalities, which ensures that no one is left behind.
Global Burden of Disease
7.Repetitive Questioning and Writing in a Patient with Transient Global Amnesia.
Dae Lim KOO ; Jin Ah KIM ; Hyunwoo NAM
Journal of Clinical Neurology 2017;13(4):424-425
No abstract available.
Amnesia, Transient Global*
;
Humans
;
Writing*
8.Historical evolution and chinese definition of global health.
Xiaoyou SU ; Xiaohui LIANG ; Zongfu MAO ; Jikuan SUN ; Yu JIANG ; Yuanli LIU ; Minghui REN
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2015;49(3):196-201
Under the background of globalization, public health issues are becoming more and more complicated. In the international arena, global health has gradually replaced international health and "global public health" as one of the dominant terms in the field of public health. However, until now, there is no unified understanding and definition for the concept of global health domestically and internationally. In this article, various foreign experts 'views and domestic experts' opinions about the concept of global health are collected and solicited, in order to generalize appropriate Chinese definition of global health of China.
China
;
Global Health
;
Humans
;
Public Health
;
Vocabulary
9.Seasonal Variation in the Incidence of Transient Global Amnesia in South Korea.
SangHak YI ; Young Ho PARK ; SangYun KIM
Journal of Clinical Neurology 2017;13(4):435-436
No abstract available.
Amnesia, Transient Global*
;
Incidence*
;
Korea*
;
Seasons*
10.Transient Global Amnesia Developed after Zolpidem Intake
Jean Hee KIM ; Yooha HWANG ; Byung Seok KIM ; Joong Seok KIM
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2018;36(3):226-230
We report two patients who complained of transient anterograde amnesia and repetitive questioning, that developed after taking zolpidem and lasted for several hours. The clinical manifestations of these patients fulfill the clinical criteria for transient global amnesia (TGA). The typical clinical manifestation of TGA following the consumption of zolpidem suggests a possible relationship associated with its drug mechanism.
Amnesia, Anterograde
;
Amnesia, Transient Global
;
Humans