1.The socialization of health services: Achievements and perspective problems
Journal of Medical and Pharmaceutical Information 2005;0(10):2-6
The conception of health care or health services socialization was the first mentioned in the resolution of the fourth conference held by the seventh Party Central Committee. In the last twelve years, we reached many achievements in order to translate the policy of health services socialization into reality: People have many improvements in terms of self-defense consciousness and health care. There are many new organizational forms: health insurance, charity fund, health care fund for the poor. Besides public health establishments, there are many private health establishments with various economic forms. However, the socialization of health services has many limits: the contrary of market mechanism put new pressures on health sector. On the other hand, health establishments lack of budget to pay essential health services
Health Services
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Socialization
2.Nursing Performance and Organizational Socialization of New Nurses according to Teaching Style of Preceptors and Personality of New Nurses.
Jeong Sill CHOI ; Nam Young YANG
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administration 2012;18(3):281-289
PURPOSE: In this study, we examined the differences and relationship between teaching style of preceptors, and personality, nursing performance, and organizational socialization of new nurses. METHODS: The participants were 118 new nurses. The data collected from March to May 2011 were analyzed using descriptive statistics, ANOVA, and Pearson correlation coefficients. RESULTS: Teaching style of preceptors was most frequently judgement-initiative, and personality of new nurses was most frequently extraversion. Nursing performance (3.05+/-.59) and organizational socialization (3.05+/-.59) of new nurses were at an average level. Nursing performance and organizational socialization of new nurses were not significantly different according to teaching style of preceptors. Significant correlations were found between personality and nursing performance, and between personality and organizational socialization. CONCLUSION: These findings indicate that changes in perceived teaching style of preceptors and personality of new nurses may be necessary to increase efficiency of preceptorship related to nursing performance and organizational socialization of new nurses. The above-mentioned results should be reflected in the development of effective preceptor training programs.
Extraversion (Psychology)
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Preceptorship
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Socialization
3.The Experience of Decision Making to Donate Organs.
Journal of Korean Academy of Adult Nursing 2003;15(2):256-266
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to identify the process of experience toward decision making to donate organs. METHOD: Eleven subjects who registered at the Association for Organ Sharing in Korea were recruited. Using in-depth interviews and tape-recordings, data was collected from Jun. 2001 to Feb. 2002 and the contents of these were analyzed by Glaser's grounded theory analysis method. RESULT: Basic Social- Psychological Problem(BSPP) of subjects were 'attachment to body' and the core theme, that is Basic Socialization Progress(BSP) were discovered to 'find out what is the meaning of life'. Also it consisted of four steps: 1st 'hesitate', 2nd 'look into self', 3rd 'realize the tie up to self' and last 're-find the meaning of life'. CONCLUSION: These findings indicate the Korean's Basic Socialization Progress of decision making regarding organ donation, so possible development of promoting decision making is necessary strategies for people who is having his/her potential of organ donation in mind.
Decision Making*
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Korea
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Socialization
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Tissue and Organ Procurement
4.A study on the Experience of Nurses' socialization Process in the Hospital Setting.
Bok Soon KIM ; Eun Jung RYU ; Kyung Hee KIM ; Hae Kyung CHUNG ; Mi Seung SONG ; Kyung Sook CHOI
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 1999;29(2):393-404
Socialization is the process of moving from one social role to another by gaining knowledge, skills and behaviors to participate in a group. Nurses who graduate from nursing school, enter the work force, and develop a career undergo socialization as they become insiders in the hospital. This study was designed to identify experiences of the nurses' socialization process in the hospital setting. The subjects were 6 nurses. Data were collected by recording and transcribing interviews and analyzed in the framework of grounded theory as mapped out by Strauss and Corbin(1990). The core category in the analysis of the experiences of nurses' socialization process was "being beyond". In the process of data analysis, 22 categories were identified. These categories were again grouped into 13. Based upon these results, it is recommended that development of resocialization models to establish nursing identity are necessary.
Nursing
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Schools, Nursing
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Socialization*
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Statistics as Topic
5.Evaluation of efficacy of activity model of village health as orientation of socialization in Dong Hy district, Thai Nguyen
Journal of Practical Medicine 2002;435(11):6-10
An evaluation of activity model of village health as socialization in 3 communes of Thai Nguyen province has shown that the people’s knowledge of environmental hygiene and reconstruction of hygienic facilities. The mother and children protection and care were improved. The morbidity rate was significantly reduced. The quality of the village health workers was good. The model of the village health was affirmed effectively and practicably.
Public Health
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Community Health Aides
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Orientation
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Socialization
6.Clinical Competence and Organizational Socialization according to Communication Style of Preceptors as Perceived by New Nurses.
Young Choon PARK ; Hyoung Sook PARK
Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamental Nursing 2016;23(1):42-50
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to examine clinical competence and organizational socialization according to communication style of preceptors as perceived by new nurses. METHODS: From May 1 to July 31, 2014, data were collected from 180 new graduated nurses who had been working for 3~12 months in hospitals in Busan and one in Gyungnam. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, t-test, ANOVA, and Pearson correlation coefficients. RESULTS: Preceptors's communication style perceived by the new nurses included supportive type, reflective type, emotive type, and directive type in order of precedence. The average score for clinical competence was 2.82+/-0.31, and the average score for organizational socialization was 3.05+/-0.40. There were significant differences in nurses' clinical competence(F=9.087, p<.001) and organizational socialization (F=30.129, p<.001) according to preceptor's communication style. CONCLUSION: Results indicate that supportive and emotive communication styles of preceptors were important factors in the success of the preceptees' clinical competence and organizational socialization.
Busan
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Clinical Competence*
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Gyeongsangnam-do
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Preceptorship
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Socialization*
7.Factors Influencing Resilience in Long-term Care Hospital Nurses
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administration 2019;25(5):373-383
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to investigate factors affecting the resilience of emotional intelligence, job stress coping, and organizational socialization of nurses working in long-term care hospitals.METHODS: The participants were 153 nurses working in 8 long-term care hospitals in B city. Data were collected from February. 1 to Feb. 15, 2019 SPSS/WIN 23.0 was used for analysis with t-test, ANOVA, Scheffé test, Pearson correlation coefficients, and stepwise regression.RESULTS: Factors influencing resilience in the participants were emotional intelligence (β=.38, p < .001), coping behavior-focusing on the positive (β=.29, p < .001), nurse motivation (β=.16, p=.006), organizational socialization (β=.17, p=.009), coping behavior-tension reduction (β=.14, p=.023). These factors contributed 54% of the total variance in resilience.CONCLUSION: It is necessary to study emotional intelligence and hospital nurses' coping with job stress while carrying out highly emotional activities on the job and to develop a program that can enhance the resilience of the nurses to improve psychological wellbeing and verify the effects.
Emotional Intelligence
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Long-Term Care
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Motivation
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Socialization
8.Illness and Experiences of the Body Among Aged Women.
Journal of Korean Academy of Adult Nursing 2007;19(3):365-378
PURPOSE: The purpose of present study was to discover the experience of the body of aged women, having had disease. Thus, the researcher tried to explore the perception of the informants and the context in which this perception emerged. METHODS: 9 aged women who had disease or trauma were recruited by snow balling and theoretical sampling methods. The iterative data collection and analyzing process proceeded between September, 1999 and January, 2005. Questions posed to the informants included: "What major change in your body comes from the disease?" "How did you feel about yourself after having had disease?". Data from interviews and participant observation was taken as text. The text was analyzed using the ongoing process of qualitative content analysing method and taxonomy of Spradley. RESULTS: Disease gives aged women a chance to reinforce the meaning of their body: the body as the most low valued component of a human, the body as a wholistic field of interacting each component of human and with natural environment and cosmos, and the body as a source of group identity. These meanings were constructed in their life world by the rules of hierarchy, reciprocity, and group cohesiveness. CONCLUSIONS: The human body is constructed as a cultural being by a social process. Nursing is concerned with the biological body and the social body. The results of this study can serve to help understand the socialization of the body and to construct a somology of nursing.
Classification
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Data Collection
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Female
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Human Body
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Humans
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Nursing
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Snow
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Socialization
9.Elementary, Middle and High School Teachers' Opinions of School Foodservice Programs.
Sook He KIM ; Kyoung Ae LEE ; Choon Hie YU ; Yo Sook SONG ; Woo Kyung KIM ; Hei Ryeo YOON ; Ju Hyeon KIM ; Jung Sug LEE ; Mi Kang KIM
The Korean Journal of Nutrition 2004;37(8):701-711
This study investigated elementary, middle, and high school teachers' satisfaction, nutrition education, workload changes, and demands in school foodservice programs (SFPs). The subjects were 630 teachers at 12 elementary, 9 middle, and 9 high school within the nation. Ninety five percent of the teachers felt that there was a necessity for SFPs. Middle school teachers (MTs) and high school teachers (HTs) thought that it was necessary in order to reduce the students'burden of carrying lunch boxes. The teachers were relatively satisfied with their school's foodservice management types, food distribution types, meal quality, and sanitation. Elementary teachers (ETs) and HTs had a higher satisfaction than MTs. Teachers thought that SFPs had positive effects on their students' nutrition and health, enhancing desirable eating habits, and socialization. ETs had more positive opinions than MTs or HTs. ETs and MTs thought that their workload had been increased by SFPs more than HTs, but they had relatively positive opinions on the workload change. ETs taught nutrition and health through SFPs more frequently than MTs or HTs. Many teachers thought that there was a lack of appropriate teaching materials. Some teachers thought that the problems in the present SFPs were: a lack of cafeteria facilities, poor quality of meals, and management of leftovers. Their demands for SFPs were a improvement of meal quality and the establishment of cafeterias. In conclusion, MTs had more negative opinions than ETs or HTs. ETs perceived that SFPs had a function as an important educational activity as well as the supply of nutritional meals. MTs or HTs tended to consider only a meal. It is suggested that teachers, especially MTs and HTs, should modify their attitudes and recognize the educational functions of SFPs. Training programs should be developed under government auspices.
Eating
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Education
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Humans
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Lunch
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Meals
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Sanitation
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Socialization
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Teaching Materials
10.Recovery outcomes of Korean adolescents with substance Abuse problems.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2000;30(7):1658-1666
Recovery in substance abuse has been simplistically measured; a more comprehensive understanding of recovery outcomes is needed. This study therefore explored recovery outcomes of Korean adolescents with substance abuse by qualitative research. The recovery was found to occur in several domains; they included reconciliation with the self, hope for the future, reconciliation with family, self-liberation, socialization, conventional norm pursuit, and a struggle for realistic independence. An understanding of the recovery process and recovery outcomes may provide guidance for clinical interventions with substance abuse adolescents.
Adolescent*
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Hope
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Humans
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Qualitative Research
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Socialization
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Substance-Related Disorders*