1.Development and Roll-Out of A Coronavirus Disease 2019 Clinical Pathway for Standardized Qualified Care in Public Hospitals in Korea
Mi Young KWAK ; Eun Young JO ; BumSik CHIN ; Se Eun PARK ; Jun YIM ; Jung Eun LEE ; Kyung Eun JO ; Yeon-Sook KIM ; Jeong Eun LEE ; Young Kyung YOON ; Yu Bin SEO ; Su Jin JEONG ; Yu Min KANG ; Eun-Jeong JOO ; Jong Hyun YOON ; Sun Bean KIM ; Ga Yeon KIM ; Min-Kyung KIM
Infection and Chemotherapy 2022;54(2):353-359
Despite the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination roll-out, variant-related outbreaks have occurred repeatedly in Korea. Although public hospitals played a major role in COVID-19 patients’ care, difficulty incorporating evolving COVID-19 treatment guidelines called for a clinical pathway (CP). Eighteen public hospitals volunteered, and a professional review board was created. CPs were formulated containing inclusion/exclusion criteria, application flow charts, and standardized order sets. After CP roll-out, key parameters improved, such as increased patient/staff five-point satisfaction scores (0.41/0.57) and decreased hospital stays (1.78 days)/medical expenses (17.5%). The CPs were updated consistently after roll-out as new therapeutics drugs were introduced and quarantine policies changed.
2.Defining Food Literacy and Its Application to Nutrition Interventions: A scoping Review
Hye lim YOO ; Eun bin JO ; Kirang KIM ; Sohyun PARK
Korean Journal of Community Nutrition 2021;26(2):77-92
Objectives:
Food literacy (FL) can be an important concept that embodies the nutritional capabilities of individuals. The purpose of this study was to introduce the definition and core elements of FL from previous literature, to summarize measurement tools and intervention programs with FL, and to suggest the direction of future research and programs to integrate the concept of FL.
Methods:
The literature review was conducted through PubMed and Google Scholar databases by combining the search term ‘food literacy’ with ‘definition’, ‘measurement’, ‘questionnaire’, ‘intervention’, and ‘program’. Among the 94 papers primarily reviewed 31 manuscripts that suited the purpose of the study were used for analyses.
Results:
There is no consensus on the definition of FL that encompasses the multidimensional aspects of the concept. The definitions of FL were slightly different depending on the authors, and the interpretation of the core elements also varied. Based on the review, we propose a framework of FL that is in line with the current discussion among international researchers. This focuses on the core elements adapted from health literacy, namely functional, interactive, and critical FL. Specifically, we suggest some detailed elements for interactive and critical FL, which were often the subject of divergent views among researchers in previous literature. We found that most of the tools in the reviewed literature provided information on validity and reliability and were developed for a specific target population. Also, most of the tools were focused on functional FL. Similarly, most of the interventions targeted functional FL.
Conclusions
This study reviewed the definition and core elements of FL, available measurement tools, and intervention programs using validated tools. We propose the development of tools with sound reliability and validity that encompass the three core elements of FL for different age groups. This will help to understand whether improving food literacy can translate into better nutritional intake and health status among individuals and communities.
3.Defining Food Literacy and Its Application to Nutrition Interventions: A scoping Review
Hye lim YOO ; Eun bin JO ; Kirang KIM ; Sohyun PARK
Korean Journal of Community Nutrition 2021;26(2):77-92
Objectives:
Food literacy (FL) can be an important concept that embodies the nutritional capabilities of individuals. The purpose of this study was to introduce the definition and core elements of FL from previous literature, to summarize measurement tools and intervention programs with FL, and to suggest the direction of future research and programs to integrate the concept of FL.
Methods:
The literature review was conducted through PubMed and Google Scholar databases by combining the search term ‘food literacy’ with ‘definition’, ‘measurement’, ‘questionnaire’, ‘intervention’, and ‘program’. Among the 94 papers primarily reviewed 31 manuscripts that suited the purpose of the study were used for analyses.
Results:
There is no consensus on the definition of FL that encompasses the multidimensional aspects of the concept. The definitions of FL were slightly different depending on the authors, and the interpretation of the core elements also varied. Based on the review, we propose a framework of FL that is in line with the current discussion among international researchers. This focuses on the core elements adapted from health literacy, namely functional, interactive, and critical FL. Specifically, we suggest some detailed elements for interactive and critical FL, which were often the subject of divergent views among researchers in previous literature. We found that most of the tools in the reviewed literature provided information on validity and reliability and were developed for a specific target population. Also, most of the tools were focused on functional FL. Similarly, most of the interventions targeted functional FL.
Conclusions
This study reviewed the definition and core elements of FL, available measurement tools, and intervention programs using validated tools. We propose the development of tools with sound reliability and validity that encompass the three core elements of FL for different age groups. This will help to understand whether improving food literacy can translate into better nutritional intake and health status among individuals and communities.
4.A Study on Relationship between Socio-demographic Factors and Food Consumption Frequencies among Adolescents in South Korea: Using the Korea Youth Risk Behavior Web-based Survey from 2011.
Ji Eun JO ; Hae Ryun PARK ; Soo Bin JEON ; Jin Sil KIM ; Go Eun PARK ; Yang LI ; Young Suk LIM ; Jinah HWANG
Korean Journal of Community Nutrition 2013;18(2):165-176
The objective of this study was to analyze the influence of socio-demographic factors on food consumption frequencies among adolescents in Korea. Data were obtained from the Seventh Korea Youth Risk Behavior Web-based Survey (2011 KYRBS), a nationwide representative sample of 75,643 (37,873 males and 37,770 females) middle and high school students. It was carried out as a self-administered on-line survey. The frequency of eating breakfast was 4.8 times per week for middle school students and 4.6 times per week for high school students (p < 0.001). Higher levels of perceived household economic status, family affluence scale (FAS) and education attainment of mother were associated with more frequent breakfast eating. The frequencies of consumption of vegetables and milk were higher in males than in females (p < 0.001). The frequency of consumption fruits was higher in females than in males (p < 0.01). Higher levels of perceived household economic status, FAS and education attainment of mother were associated with more frequent consumption of vegetable, fruits and milk. The frequencies of consumption of soda, fast food and instant noodls were higher in males than in females (p < 0.001). The frequency of consumption of snacks was higher in females than in males. Adolescents with lower levels of FAS and education attainment of mother were at risk for skipping breakfast and consuming of soda, fast food and instant noodls more frequently. Whereas, adolescents with higher levels of FAS, education attainment of mother were more likely to be frequent consumers of vegetable, fruits and milk. These findings demonstrated that being high school students and belonging to lower level of socio-economic status (SES) were associated with undesirable food habits.
Adolescent
;
Breakfast
;
Eating
;
Family Characteristics
;
Fast Foods
;
Female
;
Food Habits
;
Fruit
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Male
;
Milk
;
Mothers
;
Risk-Taking
;
Snacks
;
Vegetables
5.A Case of Lateral Medullary Infraction Presenting with Thoracic Sensory Level.
Kwang Deog JO ; Soo Bin YIM ; Sea Mi PARK ; Min Jung PARK ; Kyung Eun YUN ; Sun Hong SONG
Journal of the Korean Geriatrics Society 2005;9(4):322-325
Loss of pain and temperature sensation due to lateral medullary infarction are well known and classically involve the ipsilateral side of the face and the lower part of the body on the controlateral side. This pattern of sensory loss below a certain level on the trunk, usually a sign of spinal cord disease, may also appear following a lesion in the lateral medullar, due to damage to the spinothalamic tract. A 72-year-old hypertensive man developed sudden dizziness, headache, and gait ataxia. On neurologic examination, he had left limb and gait ataxia. Five days later he noted loss of pain and temperature sensation on the right leg and trunk with a sensory level at T4 with preservation of touch, vibration, and joint position sense in all limbs. Brain MRI showed a small infarct in the left lower lateral medulla. Brain MR angiography showed stenosis of the right proximal carotid artery, left distal vertebral artery, and mid-basilar artery. We report a case of sensory defects with a sensory level on the trunk that occured as the result of lesion of the lower lateral medulla.
Aged
;
Angiography
;
Arteries
;
Brain
;
Carotid Arteries
;
Constriction, Pathologic
;
Dizziness
;
Extremities
;
Gait Ataxia
;
Headache
;
Humans
;
Infarction
;
Joints
;
Leg
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Medulla Oblongata
;
Neurologic Examination
;
Proprioception
;
Sensation
;
Spinal Cord Diseases
;
Spinothalamic Tracts
;
Vertebral Artery
;
Vibration
6.Electrophysiological Abnormalities in a Patient with Acute Methyl Bromide Poisoning.
Kwang Deog JO ; Sun Hong SONG ; Nan Young LEE ; Eun Jin CHOI ; Soo Bin YIM ; Soon Keum LEE ; Kwang Kuk KIM
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2005;23(1):138-141
No abstract available.
Evoked Potentials
;
Humans
;
Neural Conduction
;
Poisoning*
7.Clinical Features and Surgical Treatment of Bacterial Brain Abscess.
Sung Dae JO ; Ealmaan KIM ; Chang Young LEE ; In Soo KIM ; Eun Ik SON ; Dong Won KIM ; Man Bin YIM
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2007;41(6):391-396
OBJECTIVES: This study was performed to review the clinical characteristics and operative results of brain abscess in order to define the therapeutic strategy for this disease. METHODS: We reviewed the medical records and radiology images of brain abscess patients treated in our hospital during the last 16 years. A total of 35 cases included 23 males and 12 females, with the mean age of 48 years old. We excluded cases of postoperative, post traumatic, and fungal abscess. All patient underwent at least one surgical treatment such as stereotactic aspiration or craniotomy with excision. RESULTS: Twenty seven (77.1%) patients presented with symptoms of increased intracranial pressure. The frontal lobe was the most common anatomical place, and streptococcal species were the most frequently encountered pathogens. The chronic pulmonary diseases and chronic otitis media are common underlying condition. Eighteen patients underwent stereotactic aspiration and 17 patients had excision of their abscess as an initial treatment. Seven patients had a repeated surgery, 6 of them had been treated with aspiration initially. At discharge, 60.0% patients showed a favorable outcome. CONCLUSION: The stereotactic drainage would be more suitable for the brain abscess located in deep and eloquent area. A large, solitary, and well-encapsulated lesion of superficial location could be best treated with complete excision, and this procedure was more definite because it is associated with less repeated surgery and showed more favorable outcome compared to aspiration surgery.
Abscess
;
Brain Abscess*
;
Brain*
;
Craniotomy
;
Drainage
;
Female
;
Frontal Lobe
;
Humans
;
Intracranial Pressure
;
Lung Diseases
;
Male
;
Medical Records
;
Middle Aged
;
Otitis Media
8.Analysis of Epidemiologic Characteristics between Patients Visited from Residential Aged Care Facilities and Elderly Patients Visited from Home Admitted to the Emergency Department with Disease.
Eun Mi HAM ; Hahn Bom KIM ; Chang Hae PYO ; Sang Hyun PARK ; Keun Hong PARK ; Myoung Kwan KWAK ; Seung Yul SHIN ; Su Bin OH ; Han Jo CHOI
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2017;28(1):87-96
PURPOSE: In recent years, the number of elderly patients visiting from residential aged care facilities (RACFs) has been increasing. We analyzed a comparison of characteristics between patients who visited the ER with diseases from RACFs and those who visited from home. METHODS: A retrospective study was conducted in a public hospital between January 2013 and December 2014. The subjects included patients who visited the ED from RACFs and elderly patients who visited the ED from home. Comparisons of the following parameters were made between the two groups: gender, age, mode of insurance, mode of ED visit, mobile status, Charlson comorbidity index (CCI), chief complaint, final results in the ED, and length of stay (LOS) in the ED and hospital. RESULTS: A total of 7,603 patients were enrolled during the study period. There were 6,401 elderly patients who visited from home and 1,202 patients who visited from RACFs. Patients from RACFs were older than those from home (79.90±8.01 vs. 75.78±7.26, p<0.001). More patients from RACFs were on Medicaid (56.6% vs. 27.9%, p<0.001), took more ambulance (86.3% vs. 49.4%, p<0.001), more bedridden (68.2% vs. 6.4%, p<0.001), and higher CCI (2.38±1.99 vs. 1.45±1.84, p<0.001). Compared with patients from home, those from RACFs showed a significantly higher proportion of admission (63.2% vs. 32.9%, p<0.001), ED LOS (403.03±361.77 vs. 277.07±258.82, p<0.001), and hospital LOS (19.65±18.58 vs. 15.67±15.63, p<0.001). Patients from RACFs showed especially longer ED LOS from discharged ED than those from home (388.87±422.88 vs. 221.90±215.30, p<0.001). CONCLUSION: Compared with elderly patients from home, patients from RACFs also had higher admission rate and longer ED LOS, as well as hospital LOS. Patients from RACFs had long ED LOS. The findings in this study suggest that there could be ED overcrowding in the near future.
Aged*
;
Ambulances
;
Comorbidity
;
Emergencies*
;
Emergency Service, Hospital*
;
Hospitals, Public
;
Humans
;
Insurance
;
Length of Stay
;
Medicaid
;
Nursing Homes
;
Residential Facilities
;
Retrospective Studies
9.A Study of Weight Ratio of Lung to the Spleen for the Diagnostic Index of Drowning.
Ju Bin OH ; Eun Jeung CHA ; Jeong Woo PARK ; Ik Jo CHUNG ; Youn Shin KIM ; Han Young LEE ; Ho LEE
Korean Journal of Legal Medicine 2007;31(1):72-77
The diagnosis of drowning is one of the most difficult in forensic pathology. One of the most common autopsy findings in drowning cases is a heavy, edematous lung as the result of water that is aspirated into the lungs before death. There are several controversial findings and arguments about the lung weight as a marker of drowning. The aim of the present study is to examine the difference in the lungs to the spleen weight ratio between seawater and freshwater drowning, compared with asphyxiation and acute cardiac death. This study compared the weight ratio of the lungs to the spleen for 29 cases of drowning (24 males, 5 females), 30 cases of mechanical asphyxiation (16 males, 14 females), and 37 cases of acute cardiac death (30 males, 7 females). This study presented significant differences in the lungs to the spleen weight ratio between drowning and the other causes of death . Therefore, these findings suggest that the ratio may be a useful index for accurate diagnosis of death by drowning.
Autopsy
;
Cause of Death
;
Death
;
Diagnosis
;
Drowning*
;
Forensic Pathology
;
Fresh Water
;
Humans
;
Lung*
;
Male
;
Seawater
;
Spleen*
;
Water
10.Clinical Analysis of Low Voltage Electrical Injury in One Emergency Center.
Jo Eun HAN ; Jin Joo KIM ; Keun LEE ; Hyuk Jun YANG ; Sung Youl HYUN ; Jin Sung CHO ; Won Bin PARK
Journal of Korean Burn Society 2012;15(2):92-95
PURPOSE: The majority of electrical injuries coming to emergency department are low voltage injuries cases. Therefore this study was designed to investigate the clinical characteristics and the treatment outcomes of patients with low voltage electrical injury in one emergency center. METHODS: We, retrospectively, reviewed the medical records of the patients who visited emergency department between July, 2007 and May, 2012. We noted demographics, entrance and exit point of burn injuries, associated injuries and symptoms, electrocardiograms, laboratory results, results of treatment, and so on. RESULTS: There are 103 patients enrolled. Sixty-eight (66%) patients were men with a mean age of 24 years. Pediatric patients (< or =15) were 41 (40.0%). The right upper extremity was the most common entry point, and exit point was unclear in almost cases. There were no lethal complications, except 1 case. The case with lethal complication was 57 year old man who survived from out-of hospital cardiac arrest. He was injured by 220 V electric current during 2 minutes and total arrest time was 20 minutes. He was applied with mild therapeutic hypothermia and later, discharged with favorable neurologic outcome (Cerebral Performance Categories scale 2). Overall rate of discharge, admission and transfer were 67.0%, 28.2% and 4.9%, respectively. Among the discharged patients, no patient re-visited to emergency department with severe complication. After admission, all patients discharged without severe complication. CONCLUSION: There were neither unexpected complications nor delayed complication in our study. Therefore, ED physicians might consider discharge if patients had only minor complications that can manage out-patients follow up at the initial evaluation.
Arrhythmias, Cardiac
;
Burns
;
Demography
;
Electric Injuries
;
Electrocardiography
;
Emergencies
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Heart Arrest
;
Humans
;
Hypothermia
;
Male
;
Medical Records
;
Outpatients
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Upper Extremity