1.The application of palynology in forensic medicine.
Dan-Yan ZHANG ; Dan-Mei ZHANG ; Yi-Ping HOU
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2007;23(6):457-459
Palynology, one science of plant's pollen and spores, has been proven to be a new frontier discipline. Because of the characteristics of pollen and spores, such as small size, light weight, large amount, and difficult to be found, they can leave physical evidence and provide new clues to solve a case. Therefore palynology has a good prospect for practical application in forensic medicine. The paper intends to analyze the advantage and limitation of palynology in forensic medicine by reviewing its general characteristics, classification, morphology, and disseminating circadian rhythm. We hope to provide some reference to apply palynology in forensic medicine.
Botany
;
Clothing
;
Ecosystem
;
Expert Testimony
;
Forensic Medicine/methods*
;
Humans
;
Pollen/ultrastructure*
;
Spores
2.The identification and analysis of cleaver traces on human bone.
Zi-Shu JIA ; Chun-Mei ZHAO ; Li LIU
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2010;26(3):196-197
OBJECTIVE:
The injury instruments were identified and studied according to the cleaver traces on bone.
METHODS:
The bone and fresh shrub branches were cut with the same part of the same cleaver respectively. To visualize the traces on the bone by histological processing and to match the traces on bone and branch by the comparison microscope. Then to analyze the character of traces on the bone.
RESULTS:
Cutting-line traces made by cleaver on the bone can be fully matched with those in the shrub branch sample.
CONCLUSION
Cleaver traces on the bone can be displayed clearly and shown at micro level. It will provide a new method for the identification of suspected weapon.
Bone and Bones/pathology*
;
Expert Testimony
;
Femur/pathology*
;
Forensic Pathology/methods*
;
Humans
;
Microscopy, Electron/methods*
;
Violence
;
Wood
;
Wounds and Injuries
3.Safety and Usability Guidelines of Clinical Information Systems Integrating Clinical Workflow: A Systematic Review.
Yura LEE ; Min Young JUNG ; Gee Won SHIN ; Sangwoo BAHN ; Taezoon PARK ; Insook CHO ; Jae Ho LEE
Healthcare Informatics Research 2018;24(3):157-169
OBJECTIVES: The usability of clinical information systems (CISs) is known to be an essential consideration in ensuring patient safety as well as integrating clinical flow. This study aimed to determine how usability and safety guidelines of CIS consider clinical workflow through a systematic review in terms of the target systems, methodology, and guideline components of relevant articles. METHODS: A literature search was conducted for articles published from 2000 to 2015 in PubMed, Cochrane, EMBASE, Web of Science, and CINAHL. The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) statement method was employed. Articles containing recommendations, principles, and evaluation items for CIS usability and safety were included. The selected articles were classified according to article type, methodology, and target systems. Taking clinical workflow into consideration, the components of guidelines were extracted and classified. RESULTS: A total of 7,401 articles were identified by keyword search. From the 76 articles remaining after abstract screening, 15 were selected through full-text review. Literature review (n = 7) was the most common methodology, followed by expert opinions (n = 6). Computerized physician order entry (n = 6) was the most frequent system. Four articles considered the entire process of clinical tasks, and two articles considered the principles of the entire process of user interface affecting clinical workflow. Only two articles performed heuristic evaluations of CISs. CONCLUSIONS: The usability and safety guidelines of CISs need improvement in guideline development methodology and with consideration of clinical workflow.
Expert Testimony
;
Heuristics
;
Hospital Information Systems
;
Information Systems*
;
Mass Screening
;
Medical Order Entry Systems
;
Methods
;
Patient Safety
;
User-Computer Interface
4.Bayesian Approach to Predicting Acute Appendicitis Using Ultrasonographic and Clinical Variables in Children
Tristan REDDAN ; Jonathan CORNESS ; Fiona HARDEN ; Wenbiao HU ; Kerrie MENGERSEN
Healthcare Informatics Research 2019;25(3):212-220
OBJECTIVES: Ultrasound has an established role in the diagnostic pathway for children with suspected appendicitis. Relevant clinical information can influence the diagnostic probability and reporting of ultrasound findings. A Bayesian network (BN) is a directed acyclic graph (DAG) representing variables as nodes connected by directional arrows permitting visualisation of their relationships. This research developed a BN model with ultrasonographic and clinical variables to predict acute appendicitis in children. METHODS: A DAG was designed through a hybrid method based on expert opinion and a review of literature to define the model structure; and the discretisation and weighting of identified variables were calculated using principal components analysis, which also informed the conditional probability table of nodes. RESULTS: The acute appendicitis target node was designated as an outcome of interest influenced by four sub-models, including Ultrasound Index, Clinical History, Physical Assessment, and Diagnostic Tests. These sub-models included four sonographic, three blood-test, and six clinical variables. The BN was scenario tested and evaluated for face, predictive, and content validity. A lack of similar networks complicated concurrent and convergent validity evaluation. CONCLUSIONS: To our knowledge, this is the first BN model developed for the identification of acute appendicitis incorporating imaging variables. It has particular benefit for cases in which variables are missing because prior probabilities are built into corresponding nodes. It will be of use to clinicians involved in ultrasound examination of children with suspected appendicitis, as well as their treating clinicians. Prospective evaluation and development of an online tool will permit validation and refinement of the BN.
Appendicitis
;
Bayes Theorem
;
Child
;
Diagnostic Tests, Routine
;
Emergency Medicine
;
Expert Testimony
;
Humans
;
Methods
;
Pediatrics
;
Prospective Studies
;
Ultrasonography
5.Study on forensic expertise of medical tangle.
Hai-dong ZHANG ; Lin CHANG ; Xin LIU
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2002;18(2):78-81
OBJECTIVE:
To study the characteristics of forensic expertise of medicial tangle, and explore the emphases and difficuties of forensic expertise.
METHODS:
The medical defect was classflied into the negliget defect, the technical defect, the administive defect, the learned defect and other defect. The 36 cases were analised according to the above-mentioned way.
RESULTS:
86.11% of the 36 cases has the technical defect, 25% has the negliget defect and the administive defect. There were significant different between the our expertise opinion and Medical Tangle Expertise Committee's conclusion (P < 0.05, P < 0.01).
CONCLUSION
The forensic expertise of medical tangle play the positive role in deal with the medical tangle cases, but there are many problems to further explore in forensic expertise.
Adolescent
;
Adult
;
Aged
;
Child
;
Child, Preschool
;
Expert Testimony/methods*
;
Female
;
Forensic Medicine
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Malpractice
;
Medical Errors
;
Middle Aged
6.The creation of an instrument to determine competency to stand trial.
Qin-ting ZHANG ; Wei ZHANG ; Ke-jun HUO
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2004;20(3):150-154
OBJECTIVE:
To create an instrument to determine the mental disorder offenders' competency to stand trial, which is according with the Chinese legal system.
METHODS:
Integrating the foreign instruments and the Chinese criminal jurisprudence, and combing the authors' forensic psychiatric experience, the research team created an instrument which was called Competency to stand trial Determining Instrument firstly, then used the instrument in practice, in the end the validity and reliability of the instrument were inspected, and through an diagnostic test, the feasibility of the instrument was evaluated.
RESULTS:
Split-half and homogeneity reliability of the instrument is 0.9366 and 0.9213 respectively, the correspondence of the conclusion between the instrument and the expertise is 0.704. Except the sensitivity is 0.6097, all the other diagnostic index are over 0.80.
CONCLUSION
The Competency to stand trial Determining Instrument is feasible.
Expert Testimony
;
Forensic Psychiatry/methods*
;
Humans
;
Mental Competency/standards*
;
Mental Disorders/psychology*
;
Psychiatric Status Rating Scales
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
7.A review of methods to estimate the visibility factor for bias correction in network scale-up studies
Aliakbar HAGHDOOST ; Milad AHMADI GOHARI ; Ali MIRZAZADEH ; Farzaneh ZOLALA ; Mohammad Reza BANESHI
Epidemiology and Health 2018;40(1):2018041-
Network scale-up is an indirect size estimation method, in which participants are questioned on sensitive behaviors of their social network members. Therefore, the visibility of the behavior affects the replies and estimates. Many attempts to estimate visibility have been made. The aims of this study were to review the main methods used to address visibility and to provide a summary of reported visibility factors (VFs) across populations. We systematically searched relevant databases and Google. In total, 15 studies and reports that calculated VFs were found. VF calculation studies have been applied in 9 countries, mostly in East Asia and Eastern Europe. The methods applied were expert opinion, comparison of NSU with another method, the game of contacts, social respect, and the coming-out rate. The VF has been calculated for heavy drug users, people who inject drugs (PWID), female sex workers (FSWs) and their clients, male who have sex with male (MSM), alcohol and methamphetamine users, and those who have experienced extra-/pre-marital sex and abortion. The VF varied from 1.4% in Japan to 52.0% in China for MSM; from 34.0% in Ukraine to 111.0% in China for FSWs; and from 12.0% among Iranian students to 57.0% in Ukraine for PWID. Our review revealed that VF estimates were heterogeneous, and were not available for most settings, in particular the Middle East and North Africa region, except Iran. More concrete methodologies to estimate the VF are required.
Africa, Northern
;
Bias (Epidemiology)
;
China
;
Drug Users
;
Europe, Eastern
;
Expert Testimony
;
Far East
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Iran
;
Japan
;
Male
;
Methamphetamine
;
Methods
;
Middle East
;
Sex Workers
;
Ukraine
8.Korean physicians' attitudes toward the prenatal screening for fetal aneuploidy and implementation of non-invasive prenatal testing with cell-free fetal DNA.
Soo Hyun KIM ; Kun Woo KIM ; You Jung HAN ; Seung Mi LEE ; Mi Young LEE ; Jae Yoon SHIM ; Geum Joon CHO ; Joon Ho LEE ; Soo young OH ; Han Sung KWON ; Dong Hyun CHA ; Hyun Mee RYU
Journal of Genetic Medicine 2018;15(2):72-78
PURPOSE: Physicians' attitudes may have a strong influence on women's decision regarding prenatal screening options. The aim of this study is to assess the physicians' attitudes toward prenatal screening for fetal aneuploidy including non-invasive prenatal testing (NIPT) in South Korea. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Questionnaires were distributed and collected at several obstetrics-gynecological conferences and meetings. The questionnaire included 31 multiple choice and 5 fill-in-the-blank questions. Seven questions requested physicians' demographic information, 17 questions requested information about the NIPT with cell-free fetal DNA, and 12 questions requested information about general prenatal screening practices. RESULTS: Of the 203 obstetricians that completed the survey. In contrast with professional guidelines recommending the universal offering of aneuploidy screening, only 53.7% answered that prenatal aneuploidy testing (screening and/or invasive diagnostic testing) should be offered to all pregnant women. Physicians tended to have positive attitudes toward the clinical application of NIPT as both primary and secondary screening methods for patients at high-risk for fetal trisomy. However, for patients at average-risk for fetal trisomy, physicians tended to have positive attitudes only as a secondary screening method. Physicians with more knowledge about NIPT were found to tend to inform their patients that the detection rate of NIPT is higher. CONCLUSION: This is the first study to investigate expert opinion on prenatal screening in South Korea. Education of physicians is essential to ensure responsible patient counseling, informed consent, and appropriate management after NIPT.
Aneuploidy*
;
Congresses as Topic
;
Counseling
;
DNA*
;
Education
;
Expert Testimony
;
Female
;
Genetic Testing
;
Humans
;
Informed Consent
;
Korea
;
Mass Screening
;
Methods
;
Practice Patterns, Physicians'
;
Pregnant Women
;
Prenatal Care
;
Prenatal Diagnosis*
;
Trisomy
9.A review of methods to estimate the visibility factor for bias correction in network scale-up studies.
Aliakbar HAGHDOOST ; Milad AHMADI GOHARI ; Ali MIRZAZADEH ; Farzaneh ZOLALA ; Mohammad Reza BANESHI
Epidemiology and Health 2018;40(1):e2018041-
Network scale-up is an indirect size estimation method, in which participants are questioned on sensitive behaviors of their social network members. Therefore, the visibility of the behavior affects the replies and estimates. Many attempts to estimate visibility have been made. The aims of this study were to review the main methods used to address visibility and to provide a summary of reported visibility factors (VFs) across populations. We systematically searched relevant databases and Google. In total, 15 studies and reports that calculated VFs were found. VF calculation studies have been applied in 9 countries, mostly in East Asia and Eastern Europe. The methods applied were expert opinion, comparison of NSU with another method, the game of contacts, social respect, and the coming-out rate. The VF has been calculated for heavy drug users, people who inject drugs (PWID), female sex workers (FSWs) and their clients, male who have sex with male (MSM), alcohol and methamphetamine users, and those who have experienced extra-/pre-marital sex and abortion. The VF varied from 1.4% in Japan to 52.0% in China for MSM; from 34.0% in Ukraine to 111.0% in China for FSWs; and from 12.0% among Iranian students to 57.0% in Ukraine for PWID. Our review revealed that VF estimates were heterogeneous, and were not available for most settings, in particular the Middle East and North Africa region, except Iran. More concrete methodologies to estimate the VF are required.
Africa, Northern
;
Bias (Epidemiology)*
;
China
;
Drug Users
;
Europe, Eastern
;
Expert Testimony
;
Far East
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Iran
;
Japan
;
Male
;
Methamphetamine
;
Methods*
;
Middle East
;
Sex Workers
;
Ukraine
10.Relation of conversion between acreage and length of wound or scar.
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2006;22(6):439-440
We discovered that the surface area and the length of body wounds or scar can not be calculated each other in the existing standards. It may be unfair to some assessments of body surface impairment. It is necessary to raise a means to solve this problem and provide the reference for the colleague.
Adult
;
Cicatrix/pathology*
;
Expert Testimony/standards*
;
Female
;
Forensic Pathology/methods*
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Skin/pathology*
;
Trauma Severity Indices
;
Wound Healing
;
Wounds and Injuries/pathology*