1.A Multicenter Study Investigating Empathy and Burnout Characteristics in Medical Residents with Various Specialties.
Chanmin PARK ; Yeon Jung LEE ; Minha HONG ; Chul Ho JUNG ; Yeni SYNN ; Young Sook KWACK ; Jae Sung RYU ; Tae Won PARK ; Seong Ae LEE ; Geon Ho BAHN
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2016;31(4):590-597
We assessed empathy in medical residents, including factors modifying empathy and the relationship between empathy and burnout. Participants (n = 317 residents, response rate = 42%) from 4 university hospitals completed a socio-demographic questionnaire, the Jefferson Scale of Empathy (Health Professional version, Korean edition), and the Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI). Participants were classified by medical specialty: “people-oriented specialty” (POS group) or “technology-oriented specialty” (TOS group), with more women in the POS than in the TOS group, χ2 = 14.12, P < 0.001. Being female, married, and having children were factors related to higher empathy (gender, t = -2.129, P = 0.034; marriage, t = -2.078, P = 0.038; children, t = 2.86, P = 0.005). Within specialty group, POS residents showed higher empathy scores in the fourth as compared to the first year, F = 3.166, P = 0.026. Comparing POS and TOS groups by year, fourth year POS residents had significantly higher scores than did fourth year TOS residents, t = 3.349, P = 0.002. There were negative correlations between empathy scores and 2 MBI subscales, emotional exhaustion (EE) and depersonalization (DP). Additionally, first year POS residents had higher DP scores than did first year TOS residents, t = 2.183, P = 0.031. We suggest that factors important for empathy are type of medical specialty, marriage, siblings, and children. Burnout state may be related to decreasing empathy.
Adult
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*Burnout, Professional
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Child
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Child Rearing
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Demography
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Depersonalization
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*Empathy
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Female
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Hospitals, University
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Humans
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Internship and Residency
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Male
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Marriage
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Physicians/*psychology
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Sex Factors
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Surveys and Questionnaires
2.The Analysis of Self-Mutilation in Adolescence Based on the Theory of Mentalization: From Sukhvinder in the Novel ‘Casual Vacancy’
Mi Ae OH ; Chanmin PARK ; Yeon Jeong LEE ; Minha HONG ; Ju Hee HAN ; Soo Hyun OH ; Jun Heon PARK ; Geon Ho BAHN
Journal of the Korean Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 2019;30(3):100-108
OBJECTIVES: Adolescence involves a number of developmental processes, as well as unique psychological characteristics and behaviors. An increased rate of internet and game addictions, school violence, and suicide may either represent aspects of adolescence or a psychopathological phenomenon. There is an urgent need to develop software programs that can prevent and resolve adolescent behavioral problems. We applied the mentalization theory to interpret and find solutions for problems faced by adolescent characters in literature. METHODS: In Joan Rowling's novel “Casual Vacancy,” Sukhvinder is a girl with problems representative of those encountered by modern adolescents; she is a victim of bullying and engages in self-mutilation. We targeted her problematic behaviors as representative of a prementalized state. RESULTS: Born into an upper-class English family with Pakistani origins, Sukhvinder, unlike her siblings, fails her parents' expectations. Whenever she faces a psychological crisis, she regresses into the teleological mode (the most primitive pre-mentalization stage) and regains her sense of self by cutting herself. After her friend's suicide, however, she begins to communicate with her parents and moves toward mentalization. CONCLUSION: By analyzing Sukhvinder's behavior, we assessed patterns of attachment, empathy, and mentalization, and identified corrective approaches for problematic behaviors. We believe that the presented interpretation may serve as a foundation for the development of models for understanding adolescent deviant behaviors.
Adolescent Behavior
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Adolescent
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Bullying
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Empathy
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Female
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Humans
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Internet
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Parents
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Siblings
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Suicide
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Violence
3.Advanced Pharmacotherapy Evidenced by Pathogenesis of Autism Spectrum Disorder.
Yeon Jung LEE ; Soo Hyun OH ; Chanmin PARK ; Minha HONG ; Ah Rah LEE ; Hee Jeong YOO ; Chan Young SHIN ; Keun Ah CHEON ; Geon Ho BAHN
Clinical Psychopharmacology and Neuroscience 2014;12(1):19-30
In clinical practice, pharmacological treatment is mostly focused on behavioral symptoms in everyday life. Nevertheless, persistent effort continues to develop medication for causal treatment. Recent changes in diagnostic criteria from Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th edition, text revision (DSM-IV-TR) to DSM-5 would affect not only diagnosing approaches, but also therapeutic approaches. Because previous pervasive developmental disorders have been integrated into a single entity, the autism spectrum disorder (ASD), we have to prepare for what medications are valuable for the ASD. In this article, we reviewed the following etiological treatment: acetylcholine and glutamate related medicine; amino acid medicine such as secretin, endogenous opioid, and oxytocin; complementary and alternative medicine such as chelating agents, vitamins, and omega-3; promising drugs related to the scope of pharmacogenetics currently under study.
Acetylcholine
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Behavioral Symptoms
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Chelating Agents
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Child
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Autism Spectrum Disorder*
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Complementary Therapies
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Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
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Drug Therapy*
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Glutamic Acid
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Oxytocin
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Pharmacogenetics
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Secretin
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Vitamins
4.Factors Related to Noncompliance in Screening and Tracking Mild Cognitive Impairment Patients in a Single Community.
Chanmin PARK ; Won Sub KANG ; Jong Woo KIM ; Jong Woo PAIK ; Young Jong KIM ; Jun Hee JEON ; Mee Ae LEE ; Jae Gwang KIM ; Ji Young SONG
Psychiatry Investigation 2017;14(2):111-117
OBJECTIVE: We assessed the cumulative conversion rates (CCR) from minor cognitive impairment (MCI) to dementia among individuals who failed to participate in annual screening for dementia. Additionally, we analyzed the reasons for failing to receive follow-up screening in order to develop better strategies for improving follow-up screening rates. METHODS: We contacted MCI patients who had not visited the Dongdaemun-gu Center for Dementia for annual screening during the year following their registration. We compared the CCR from MCI to dementia in the following two groups: subjects registered as having MCI in the Dongdaemun-gu Center for Dementia database and subjects who failed to revisit the center, but who participated in a screening test for dementia after being contacted. The latter participants completed a questionnaire asking reasons for not previously visiting for follow-up screening. RESULTS: The final diagnoses of the 188 subjects who revisited the center only after contact were 19.1% normal, 64.9% MCI and 16.0% dementia. The final diagnoses of the 449 subjects in the Dongdaemun-gu Center for Dementia database were 25.6% normal, 46.1% MCI and 28.3% dementia. The CCR of the revisit-after-contact group was much lower than anticipated. The leading cause for noncompliance was “no need for tests” at 28.2%, followed by “other reasons” at 23.9%, and “I forgot the appointment date” at 19.7%. CONCLUSION: Considering the low dementia detection rate of the group who revisited only after contact and the reasons they gave for noncompliance, there appears to be a need for ongoing outreach and education regarding the course and prognosis of MCI.
Cognition Disorders
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Dementia
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Diagnosis
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Education
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Follow-Up Studies
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Humans
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Mass Screening*
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Mild Cognitive Impairment*
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Prognosis