1.Effects of Integrated Palliative Care Intervention on Quality of Life in Terminal Cancer Patients: A Meta-analysis.
Kae Hwa JO ; Ae Ran PARK ; Jin Ju LEE
Korean Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care 2015;18(2):136-147
PURPOSE: This study was conducted to evaluate the effects of integrated palliative care intervention on quality of life in terminally ill patients. METHODS: A comprehensive literature search was performed via PubMed, Cochrane Library CENTRAL, LWW (Ovid), CINAHL and several Korean databases. The main search strategy was to combine terms indicating palliative care intervention, presence of terminal illness and study design. Methodological quality was assessed using Cochrane's Risk of Bias for randomized studies and Risk of Bias Assessment tool for non-randomized studies. Data were analyzed by the Stata 10 program. RESULTS: Eight clinical trials met the inclusion criteria with a total of 356 participants. Integrated palliative care interventions were administered for a mean of 6.5 weeks, 5.6 sessions and an average of 47.8 minutes per session. Effect sizes were heterogeneous, and subgroup analysis was done. Integrated palliative care interventions had a significant effect on quality of life (ES=1.83, P=0.018, l2=92%), spiritual well-being (ES=0.78, P=0.040, l2=0), depression (ES=0.86, P<0.001, l2=32) and anxiety (ES=0.69, P=0.041, l2=71.1). But integrated palliative care interventions had no significant effect on pain (ES=0.365, P=0.230, l2=69.8). CONCLUSION: Results support findings that integrated palliative care interventions were helpful in lessening depression and anxiety and improving quality of life and spiritual well-being, however, the interventions did not assist pain management in terminal cancer patients. These findings suggest that various integrated palliative care interventions can assist terminal cancer patients with better quality of life in the socio-psycho-spiritual dimension.
Anxiety
;
Bias (Epidemiology)
;
Depression
;
Humans
;
Pain Management
;
Palliative Care*
;
Quality of Life*
;
Terminally Ill
2.The Effect of Suffering Experience, Empathy Ability, Caring Behaviors on Terminal Care Performance of Clinical Nurses.
Kae Hwa JO ; Ae Ran PARK ; Jin Ju LEE ; Su Jung CHOI
Korean Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care 2015;18(4):276-284
PURPOSE: This study was performed to identify factors affecting terminal care performance of clinical nurses. METHODS: The participants in this study were 175 nurses working in hospitals in Daegu and North Gyeongsang Province. Data were collected using a self-reported questionnaire and were analyzed with the IBM SPSS WIN 19.0 program. RESULTS: Nurses' terminal care performance was significantly related with suffering experience, empathy ability and caring behaviors. Significant predictors for terminal care performance were their department, empathy ability and caring behaviors. These factors explained 43.52% of the variance in terminal care performance of clinical nurses. CONCLUSION: Our study results suggest that terminal care performance of clinical nurses can be strengthened by improving empathy ability and caring behaviors.
Daegu
;
Empathy*
;
Nursing Care
;
Terminal Care*
3.Development and Evaluation of an Integrative Palliative Care Scale for Cancer Patients.
Kae Hwa JO ; Ae Ran PARK ; Su Jung CHOI ; Eun Young YOO
Journal of Korean Academic Society of Nursing Education 2017;23(2):165-174
PURPOSE: This study was done to develop and to evaluate an integrative palliative care scale for cancer patients. METHODS: The process included construction of a conceptual framework, generation of initial items, verification of content validity, selection of secondary items, preliminary study, and extraction of final items. The participants were 173 cancer patients in Daegu and Gyeongbuk. Item analysis, factor analysis, criterion related validity, and internal consistency were used to analyze the data. RESULTS: Eighteen items were selected for the final scale, and categorized into 3 factors explaining 58.3% of total variance. The factors were labeled as social/environmental palliative care (9 items), psychological palliative care (4 items), and physical palliative care (3 items), and spiritually palliative care (2 items). The scores for the scale were significantly correlated with the quality of life of cancer patients. Cronbach's alpha coefficient for the 18 items was .88. CONCLUSION: The above findings indicate that the integrative palliative care scale has good validity and reliability when used for cancer patients.
Daegu
;
Gyeongsangbuk-do
;
Humans
;
Palliative Care*
;
Quality of Life
;
Reproducibility of Results
4.A Newborn with Lethal Metatropic Dysplasia.
Hye Jung CHO ; Seon Tae HWANG ; Sang Seon LEE ; Jee Eun KIM ; Ae Ran JO ; So Yeon SHIM ; In Sang JEON ; Dong Woo SON
Journal of the Korean Society of Neonatology 2010;17(1):141-146
Metatropic dysplasia is a rare spondylo epi metaphyseal dysplasia characterized by progressive kyphoscoliosis, short limbs with relatively large hands and feet and limited of motion and enlargement of the large joints. It is diagnosed based on the characteristic clinical and radiological features. Even though benign cases of this disease are frequently reported, metatropic dysplasia can often have a fatal outcome. We describe a sporadic case of the well-delineated lethal metatropic dysplasia.
Dwarfism
;
Extremities
;
Fatal Outcome
;
Foot
;
Hand
;
Humans
;
Infant, Newborn
;
Joints
;
Osteochondrodysplasias
5.Multicenter Survey of Intoxication Cases in Korean Emergency Departments: 2nd Annual Report, 2009.
Ae Jin SUNG ; Kyung Woo LEE ; Byung Hak SO ; Mi Jin LEE ; Hyun KIM ; Kyung Hye PARK ; Jeong Bae PARK ; Seok Ran YEOM ; Seong Beom OH ; Ji Young YOU ; Kyung Won LEE ; Byeong Jo CHUN ; Young Joon KANG
Journal of The Korean Society of Clinical Toxicology 2012;10(1):22-32
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to examine the occurrence of toxic exposure cases in Korean emergency centers using a toxic exposure surveillance system-based report form and to provide guidelines for the prevention and treatment of toxic exposures. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of toxic exposure patients who had visited emergency centers from January 2009 to December 2009. Epidemiology data points for the toxic exposure cases included age, gender, type of exposure, number and kind of substances involved, reason and route of poison exposure, management of the patients in the emergency departments, and the clinical outcome. RESULTS: A total of 3,501 patients from 12 emergency departments were enrolled in the study. 50.0% of the total exposure patients were male and 63.0% of the total cases were fatal. Acute intoxication occurred in 91.3% of the total patients and suicidal intent was the most common (43.3%) reason for exposure. The most common route of exposure was ingestion (75.9%). Of the total cases, pesticides were involved in 26.3%, sedatives/hypnotics/antipsychotics were involved in 22.0%, and bites and envenomations were involved in 15.7%. CONCLUSION: We provided a database of patients who were admitted to emergency departments after poisoning incidents. We recommend that toxicology professionals develop a classification scheme for toxicants which is adequate for Korean domestic circumstances and initiate a toxic surveillance system for all types of exposures. With support of a psychiatric surveillance system for suicidal patients and establishment of social mediation for pesticide poisoning, major reductions in poison exposures can be achieved.
Bites and Stings
;
Eating
;
Emergencies
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Medical Records
;
Negotiating
;
Pesticides
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Toxicology
6.A Case of Multiple Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma in an Adult Patient Presenting with Ventricular Tachycardia.
Min Jeong KWON ; Dong Soo KIM ; Ae Ran KIM ; Dong Kie KIM ; Ki Hyang KIM ; Kyeong Im JO ; Dae Kyeong KIM ; Doo Il KIM ; Chan Hwan KIM
Korean Circulation Journal 2005;35(4):341-344
Cardiac metastases of renal cell carcinomas are rare, and usually clinically silent. A case of a 53-year-old man without a significant medical history, who presented with ventricular tachycardia, which resulted in a cardiac mass of the right ventricle is reported. On chest X-ray, echocardiography, CT scanning, esophagogastroduode-noscopy and MRI, multiple metastatic masses were observed in both lungs, and the kidneys, adrenal, stomach and right ventricle. The kidney mass and the gastric polyp were revealed on biopsy to be a renal cell carcinoma mixed with sarcomatoid and conventional types.
Adult*
;
Biopsy
;
Carcinoma, Renal Cell*
;
Echocardiography
;
Heart Ventricles
;
Humans
;
Kidney
;
Lung
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Middle Aged
;
Neoplasm Metastasis
;
Polyps
;
Stomach
;
Tachycardia, Ventricular*
;
Thorax
;
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
7.Korean Addiction Treatment Guidelines Series (I) : Development of Korean Guidelines for the Treatment of Alcohol Use Disorder.
Bo Hye LEE ; Hyun Soo KIM ; Jeong Seok SEO ; Young Chul SHIN ; Seon Wan KI ; Sung Gon KIM ; Keun Ho JOE ; Kye Seong LEE ; Sam Wook CHOI ; Young Hoon CHON ; Sung Won ROH ; Hong Seok OH ; Hong Gyun YOON ; Chang Woo HAN ; Sun Jin JO ; Dai Jin KIM ; Ae Ran PARK ; Soo Bi LEE ; Hae Kook LEE
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 2013;52(4):263-271
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study is to develop Treatment Guidelines for Alcohol Use Disorder-the Korean Addiction Treatment Guidelines-using the Adaptation method. METHODS AND PROCEDURES: As the Adaptation method of Guidelines, the ADAPTE Manual, which is developed by ADAPTE collaboration is applied. In Part 1 : preparatory work prior to the beginning of Adaptation is performed. In Part 2 : the core phase of the Adaptation in which we searched the guidelines and performed a systematic review of the literature. The two guidelines (of the AU and the UK) are selected by gone through the methodological quality and currency evaluation for guidelines. And, in order to choose the proper recommendations, the contents were evaluated with regard to the applicability and acceptability of guidelines to the domestic. Finally, in Part 3 : the adapted guideline is reviewed externally, with review and plan update. Therefore, in this way, the Korean Guidelines for Treatment of Alcohol Use Disorder, comprised of 55 recommendations, was developed. CONCLUSION: In this study, Korean Guidelines for Treatment of Alcohol Use Disorder were developed by application of the Adaptation method of ADAPTE. These are the first evidence-based Korean Guidelines for Treatment of Alcohol Use Disorder, which were modified and accepted in accordance with Korean circumstances within the range not damaging the validity of the treatment worth, and it is expected to contribute to improvement in quality and efficiency enhancement of Korean treatment of Alcohol Use Disorder.
Cooperative Behavior