1.Trends in Research on the History of Medicine in Korea before the Modern Era.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2010;19(1):1-43
Research on the history of medicine in Korea in the form of modern scholarship began with the publication in 1930 of Yi Neunghwa's "A History of the Development of Medicine in Korea." The purpose of the present study lies in surveying studies on the history of medicine in Korea in the past 80 years since the publication of Yi's paper. In terms of periodization, research on the history of medicine in Korea is bifurcated by the publication of two comprehensive histories.i. e., Miki Sakae's A History of Medicine and Disease in Korea (1963) and Kim Du-jong's The Complete History of Medicine in Korea (1966). Indeed, all earlier studies converged in these two books. Because Miki and Kim both had majored in Western medicine and conducted research based on similar perspectives, data, and methods, the two works overlap considerably, and Kim's book, as the later of the two, unfortunately lost the initiative to the former to a considerable extent. As a result of these two scholars' research, it became possible to trace the overall flow of the history of medicine in Korea. Following the publication of works by Miki and Kim and with the advent of the 1980's, research on the history of medicine in premodern Korea was renovated with the emergence of no fewer than some dozen new doctoral degree holders in the field. In fact, these young scholars went beyond surveying trends in each era to expand the scope of specific discussions and topics per era, to delve into the actual contents, and to elucidate the function of medicine in society. The fruits of studies conducted in the past 80 years on the history of medicine in premodern Korea can be summarized as follows. 1) before the 5th century AD: the existence of a comprehensive medical practice in regions inhabited by those considered to be the ancestors of the Korean people; and information on medication including ginseng. 2) 5th-10th centuries: the existence of professional medical posts; the management of medicine by the royal household; institutions for medical education; the import and use of Chinese medical texts; the compilation of independent medical texts; the transmission of medical knowledge to Japan; and the import and export of medicinal ingredients. 3) 10th-14th centuries: public medical organs; medicine focusing on domestic medication; the invitation of medical doctors and the transmission of new medicine from Song China; the inclusion of medicine in the civil service examinations; the compilation of diverse types of Korean medical texts including those on native medicinal ingredients; disaster relief organs; regional medical organs; regional medicinal ingredient tribute system; and the state's measures against infectious diseases. 4) 14th-17th centuries: the consolidation of traditional East Asian medicine; the consolidation of Korean medicine including native medicinal ingredients; the emergence of a medical tradition that stresses the Daoist preservation of health ; and the publication of dozens of types of Chinese and Korean medical texts led by the entral and regional governments. Also noteworthy is the emergence of simple medical texts on emergency relief, pregnancy and childbirth, smallpox, and epidemics ( as well as the dissemination of their vernacular editions. In addition, there were phenomena such as the increasing occupation of the posts of medical officials by the non-aristocratic middling jung'in class; the existence of Confucian scholar-physicians and women physicians; and the compilation of texts on independent external medicine. 5) 17th-19th centuries: the formation of medicinal ingredient markets; the spread of pharmacies throughout the provinces; a vogue for Ming Chinese medical texts; veneration for the Treasured Mirror of Eastern Medicine; the emergence of a positivistic stance toward medical research; a vogue for experiential remedies; interest in Western medicine; compilation of several medical texts on measles; criticism of Chinese traditional medicine and/or Korean traditional medicine; the spread of variolation; attempts to introduce smallpox vaccination ; Korean-Japanese medical exchange through the dispatch of Korean goodwill missions to Japan; a great vogue for the Treasured Mirror of Eastern Medicine in both China and Japan; the emergence of independent medical texts on acupuncture; the successful cultivation and massive export of ginseng; and the birth of the Sasang (4-type) constitutional typology, a native medical tradition.
China
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Emergencies/history
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History, 20th Century
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Humans
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Japan
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Korea
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Language
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Publications/history
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Research/*history
2.Clinical Characteristics and History of Patients with Hemoperitoneum due to Ovarian Cyst Rupture.
Hyung Gyu KIM ; Ho Jung KIM ; Young Soon CHO ; Myung Gab LEE ; Byeong Dae YOO ; Duck Ho JUN
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2010;21(6):840-843
PURPOSE: To evaluate and analyze the clinical characteristics and history of patients with hemoperitoneum due to ovarian rupture. METHODS: Subjects were fertile females who visited the emergency department between January 2006 and December 2008. We did retrospective chart reviews only for patients diagnosed with hemoperitoneum. We investigated the characteristics and history of enrolled patients. RESULTS: A total of 76 females (mean age = 28 years) were enrolled. Of the 76, 32 (41.8%) were initially checked for coitus history by emergency physicians (EP). Of the 76, 52 (68.4%) were operated on and the remaining 24 (31.6%) were only observed. Only 4 patients had knowledge of a history of ovarian cysts. CONCLUSION: Coitus history and ovarian cyst history should be done by EPs during the initial examination of fertile females who complain of lower abdominal pain.
Abdominal Pain
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Coitus
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Emergencies
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Female
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Hemoperitoneum
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Humans
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Medical History Taking
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Ovarian Cysts
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Retrospective Studies
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Rupture
3.Diagnostic Approach to Abdominal Pain.
Han Seung RYU ; Suck Chei CHOI
Korean Journal of Medicine 2012;83(5):553-561
Abdominal pain is a common chief complaint that brings patients to emergency departments and outpatient offices. The causes of abdominal pain are numerous, ranging from life-threatening to self-limiting disorders. Diagnostic approaches are often difficult because of the nonspecific and overlapping nature of pain, regardless of the underlying cause. A careful medical history taking is the initial diagnostic step. All patients should undergo systematic examinations, regardless of the differential diagnosis suggested by the history. On the basis of the clinical suspicion and laboratory investigations, the physician will consider imaging examinations to help establish the correct diagnosis. Various endoscopic and imaging modalities have important roles in diagnosing many causes of abdominal pain. Diagnostic approaches rely on the likelihood of disease obtaining from histories of patients, physical examinations, laboratory tests, and imaging studies. Furthermore, the evaluation of abdominal pain must be efficient and lead to an accurate diagnosis early in the presentation. It is also important to consider special populations such as women especially during pregnancy and the elderly, because of presentations may differ and are often complicated by coexistent disease.
Abdominal Pain
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Aged
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Diagnosis, Differential
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Emergencies
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Female
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Humans
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Medical History Taking
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Outpatients
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Physical Examination
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Pregnancy
4.Influence of Compendium of Materia Medica on the Materia Medica in the late period of the Chosun Dynasty.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2012;21(2):193-226
In this paper, I investigated the influence of Compendium of Materia Medica (CM) on Records for Rural Life of Chosun Gentlemen (RRC), and refuted Miki Sakae's opinion, CM did not have much impact on the Materia Medica in the late period of the Chosun Dynasty. When Li Shizhen published CM, it resulted in a shift of mainstream of Materia Medica in Eastern Asia from Classified Emergency Materia Medica to CM and a new categorizing system of Materia Medica by CM led to the division of Materia Medica into medicine and natural history. It is obvious that doctors of the Chosun Dynasty also adopted the latest achievements of Materia Medica by CM, but so far there have been few studies to clarify this. Seo yugu was a scholar of the Realist School of Confucianism during the late period of the Chosun Dynasty, and RRC is his representative work. RRC is a massive encyclopedia of natural history that covers vast areas of science from agriculture, floriculture, writing and drawing, architecture, diet, and medicine, among others which absorbed the achievements of CM, the best Materia Medica book at that time. Miki Sakae also highly regarded the encyclopedic knowledge of RRC, but devalued the results of Materia Medica. He only described a part of RRC's Materia Medica, nurturing volume, on the view of life nurturing and mentioned that it had been strongly influenced by China. According to this study, a large portion of RRC, especially regarding Materia Medica, depends on CM. Seo yugu had accepted the categorizing system and new medicinal information of CM, at the same time he modified the categorizing system of CM practically by the subject of each volume of RRC. We can find many quotations of CM except the nurturing volume, but other books, Treasured Mirror of Eastern Medicine, Materia Medica for Relief of Famines are also quoted. Furthermore, Seo yugu emphasized the differences of natural environments between Chosun and China, and specified the editing criteria, "to be useful in Chosun." This is the most obvious evidence that Materia Medica of Chosun had not remained in the framework of Treasured Mirror of Eastern Medicine which succeeded Classified Emergency Materia Medica, but had been developed into medicine and natural history based on CM.
Achievement
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Agriculture
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China
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Confucianism
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Diet
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Emergencies
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Far East
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Humans
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Materia Medica
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Natural History
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Starvation
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Writing
5.Endoscopic Optic Nerve Decompression in Traumatic Optic Neuropathy.
In Young KIM ; Jae Hyoo KIM ; Jung Kil LEE ; Tae Sun KIM ; Soo Han KIM ; Sam Suk KANG ; Je Hyuk LEE ; Jae Shik CHO ; Sung Ju KIM
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 1997;26(6):874-878
Traumatic optic neuropathy is a challenging emergency; controversies involving definition, natural history, pathomechanisms, and treatment modalities make its management problematic. Surgical decompression does not always yield favorable results; if this approach is considered, however, a careful evaluation of the necessary extent of invasion, the patient's condition(including a compromised brain) and the surgeon's familiarity with the procedure must all be carefully considered. We managed two traumatic optic neuropathy patients whose vision had been lost after fracture of the medial orbital wall. Using a nasal endoscope, the endonasal approach was employed, and endoscopic optic nerve decompression was performed; visual acuity was partly recovered. This precedure can be used in patients with decreased visual acuity due to traumatic optic neuropathy involving fractures of the optic canal. It is considered minimally invasive, has no specific contraindication, and can be used in patients whose brain condition is compromised.
Brain
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Decompression*
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Decompression, Surgical
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Emergencies
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Endoscopes
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Humans
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Natural History
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Optic Nerve Injuries*
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Optic Nerve*
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Orbit
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Recognition (Psychology)
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Visual Acuity
6.Acute Appendicitis in Children: Comparison between Present and 10 Year Ago.
Seong Min KIM ; Se Hoon KIM ; Hyun Ho CHOI ; Seok Joo HAN ; Seung Hoon CHOI ; Eui Ho HWANG ; Jung Tak OH
Journal of the Korean Association of Pediatric Surgeons 2007;13(1):45-51
Appendicitis is the most common surgical emergency in childhood and the technologic advances of modern medicine have affected the diagnosis and treatment of appendicitis. This study is to evaluate the differences in diagnosis and treatment of appendicitis between present and 10 year ago. The authors retrospectively reviewed the medical records of patients who underwent appendectomy under the diagnosis of the acute appendicitis from July 1993 to June 1995 (Group A, n = 78) and from July 200 to June 2005 (Group B, n = 105). There are no differences between group A and B in mean age (8.5 +/-3.6 vs. 9.3 +/-3.1 year), duration of symptoms (3.0 +/-3.2 vs. 2.6 +/-3.8 days), and postoperative hospital stay(6.6 +/-4.8 vs. 5.8 +/-3.6 days). Preoperative abdominal ultrasonogram and/or computed tomogram was performed in 7 patients (9.0 %) of group A and in 51 patients (58.5 %) of group B. Thirty-six patients (34.3 %) of group B underwent laparoscopic appendectomy, but none in group A. Incidence of a histologically normal appendix decreased from 15.8 % in group A to 4.8 % in group B (p =0.018). This study suggests that utilization of abdominal ultrasonogram or computed tomogram in preoperative evaluation become more popular and surgical treatment of acute appendicitis become more minimally invasive. The rate of negative appendectomy was also reduced compared with 10 year ago.
Appendectomy
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Appendicitis*
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Appendix
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Child*
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Diagnosis
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Emergencies
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History, Modern 1601-
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Humans
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Incidence
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Laparoscopy
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Medical Records
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Retrospective Studies
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Ultrasonography
7.A Case of spontaneous Rupture of Isolated Internal Iliac Artery Aneurysm.
Hyang Suk KIM ; Yoon Seok JOUNG ; Joon Pil CHO
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 1999;10(3):481-486
Isolated infernal iliac artery aneurysms and rupture are relatively infrequent, often difficult to detect and therefore rarely considered in the differential diagnosis for abdominal pain. The consequences can be grave, The incidence of isolated iliac artery aneurysm is 1~2% of that of abdominal aortic aneurysm(AAA). The natural history is of gradual enlargement, with rupture the most common clinical presentation. The signs and symptoms of such an aneurysm are influenced by its concealed location within the bony pelvis. Awareness of these special characteristics improves the chances of early diagnosis and proper surgical treatment before possible rupture. Here is a case of ruptured aneurysm of left internal iliad artery. A 73-year-old man was presented to our emergency center with severe abdominal pain and voiding difficulty Abdominal Computed Tomography(Cf) and angiography showed ruptured aneurysm of left infernal iliad artery. Emergency operation was successfully performed for the ruptured internal iliad artery aneurysm.
Abdominal Pain
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Aged
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Aneurysm*
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Aneurysm, Ruptured
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Angiography
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Arteries
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Diagnosis, Differential
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Early Diagnosis
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Emergencies
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Humans
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Iliac Artery*
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Incidence
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Natural History
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Pelvis
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Rupture
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Rupture, Spontaneous*
8.Spontaneous Pneumomediastinum: Natural History and Clinical Significance.
Eun Young RUE ; Won Jae LEE ; Suk Joo RHA
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 1997;8(4):535-541
STUDY OBJECTIVE: We evaluate the clinical characteristics and natural history of patients presenting with spontaneous pneumomediastinum (SPNM) . DESIGN: A retrospective case series was conducted to identify patients diagnosed with SPNM. ICD-7(J98.2) discharge codes were used for Jan. 1993 to Aug. 1996 at four institutions , and emergency department(ED) records and admission charts were reviewed. Clinical features, interventions, complications, setting, etiology, symptoms, and length of hospital stay were recorded. PARTICIPANTS: All ED patients more than 12 years old with a diagnosis of SPNM. RESULTS: Thirteen cases were identified. Age range was 14 to 58 years(mean 24 years). Presenting symptoms were chest pain in eight(62%), dyspnea in six(46%), both symptoms in three(23%), no complaints in three(23%). Seven(54%) patients complained only of throat discomfort. Seven(54%) had subcutaneous emphysema, and two(15.3%) had a small pneumothorax. Two(15.3%) were smokers. Three(23%) had normal esophagograms and another three had normal chest CT findings. Two cases(15.3%) were associated with inhalational drug use and three cases were due to exercise. Nine cases(69%) had a history of "Valsalva-type" maneuver. Two patients(15%) had a history of antituberculous treatment and one(7.7.%) had suffered from bronchial asthma. Mean hospital days were 7.3 days(range 3 to 14), none of all needed any intervention. Specifically, no patient developed a subsequent pneumothorax or airway compromise. Seven cases(54%) were received prophylactic antibiotics. CONCLUSION: Most simple SPNM cases are benign disease and most of them(78%) had shown typical chest pain, dyspnea and subcutaneous emphysema. Inhalational drug use is not a main cause of SPNM yet, but increase in use of bronchoinhalers is a suspicous cause of SPNM.
Anti-Bacterial Agents
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Asthma
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Chest Pain
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Child
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Diagnosis
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Dyspnea
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Emergencies
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Humans
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Length of Stay
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Mediastinal Emphysema*
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Natural History*
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Pharynx
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Pneumothorax
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Retrospective Studies
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Subcutaneous Emphysema
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed
9.The Usefulness of Tablet Computer for Self-surveys of Child-bearing Aged Women Who Visit the Emergency Department with Abdominal Pain.
Yongjoo PARK ; Jonghwan SHIN ; Hui Jai LEE ; Kijeong HONG ; Jin Hee JUNG
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2014;25(1):103-108
PURPOSE: In the emergency department (ED), identification of the obstetrical and gynecologic history for diagnosis of child-bearing aged women who present with abdominal pain is very important. We compared the usefulness of self-registry using a tablet computer and a traditional paper registry for taking history of child-bearing aged women. METHODS: We reviewed the prospective registries of child-bearing aged women presenting with abdominal pain without underlying disease to the ED of the Seoul Metropolitan Boramae Medical Center. We used a paper version of this registry from April 2008 to April 2011. From May 2011 to October 2012, we used the Smart Medical Registry (SMR), where the patient used a tablet computer to record her own data. The registries of child-bearing aged women included information on the patient's basic information, medical history, gynecologic history, symptoms, physician's examination, and laboratory results. We performed statistical analysis of the difference between the paper registry and SMR. RESULTS: A total of 1193 patients were registered. Among them, 835 patients were registered using the SMR. There were no statistically significant differences in the patients' basic information and diagnostic classification. However, the SMR group reported more recent history of pelvic inflammatory disease (p<0.01), higher number of abortions (p<0.01), and higher number of sexual partners (p<0.01). CONCLUSION: Using the tablet computer based self-survey, patients had a more positive tendency toward answering privacy sensitive items. Therefore, it might be more useful and effective in obtaining sensitive, private information from patients.
Abdominal Pain*
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Classification
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Diagnosis
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Emergencies*
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Emergency Medicine
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Emergency Service, Hospital*
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Female
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Humans
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Medical History Taking
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Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
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Privacy
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Registries
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Seoul
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Sexual Partners
10.The Usefulness of Tablet Computer for Self-surveys of Child-bearing Aged Women Who Visit the Emergency Department with Abdominal Pain.
Yongjoo PARK ; Jonghwan SHIN ; Hui Jai LEE ; Kijeong HONG ; Jin Hee JUNG
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2014;25(1):103-108
PURPOSE: In the emergency department (ED), identification of the obstetrical and gynecologic history for diagnosis of child-bearing aged women who present with abdominal pain is very important. We compared the usefulness of self-registry using a tablet computer and a traditional paper registry for taking history of child-bearing aged women. METHODS: We reviewed the prospective registries of child-bearing aged women presenting with abdominal pain without underlying disease to the ED of the Seoul Metropolitan Boramae Medical Center. We used a paper version of this registry from April 2008 to April 2011. From May 2011 to October 2012, we used the Smart Medical Registry (SMR), where the patient used a tablet computer to record her own data. The registries of child-bearing aged women included information on the patient's basic information, medical history, gynecologic history, symptoms, physician's examination, and laboratory results. We performed statistical analysis of the difference between the paper registry and SMR. RESULTS: A total of 1193 patients were registered. Among them, 835 patients were registered using the SMR. There were no statistically significant differences in the patients' basic information and diagnostic classification. However, the SMR group reported more recent history of pelvic inflammatory disease (p<0.01), higher number of abortions (p<0.01), and higher number of sexual partners (p<0.01). CONCLUSION: Using the tablet computer based self-survey, patients had a more positive tendency toward answering privacy sensitive items. Therefore, it might be more useful and effective in obtaining sensitive, private information from patients.
Abdominal Pain*
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Classification
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Diagnosis
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Emergencies*
;
Emergency Medicine
;
Emergency Service, Hospital*
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Medical History Taking
;
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
;
Privacy
;
Registries
;
Seoul
;
Sexual Partners