1.Antimicrobial activity of eight root canal sealers before and after setting.
Denny Y FANG ; Woocheol LEE ; Chern H LAI
Journal of Korean Academy of Conservative Dentistry 2002;27(2):207-211
No abstract available.
Dental Pulp Cavity
2.Skill validation study on sentinel lymph node biopsy in breast cancer and the challenges of false-negative, in-transit and micrometastatic nodes
Chen Siew Ng ; Sarojah Arulanantham ; Joon Joon Khoo ; Subathra Sabaratnam ; Yeong Fong Lee ; Chin Fang Ngim
The Medical Journal of Malaysia 2016;71(5):275-281
3.Association of EMR Adoption with Minority Health Care Outcome Disparities in US Hospitals.
Jae Young CHOI ; Yong Fang KUO ; James S GOODWIN ; Jinhyung LEE
Healthcare Informatics Research 2016;22(2):101-109
OBJECTIVES: Disparities in healthcare among minority groups can result in disparate treatments for similar severities of symptoms, unequal access to medical care, and a wide deviation in health outcomes. Such racial disparities may be reduced via use of an Electronic Medical Record (EMR) system. However, there has been little research investigating the impact of EMR systems on the disparities in health outcomes among minority groups. METHODS: This study examined the impact of EMR systems on the following four outcomes of black patients: length of stay, inpatient mortality rate, 30-day mortality rate, and 30-day readmission rate, using patient and hospital data from the Medicare Provider Analysis and Review and the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society between 2000 and 2007. The difference-in-difference research method was employed with a generalized linear model to examine the association of EMR adoption on health outcomes for minority patients while controlling for patient and hospital characteristics. RESULTS: We examined the association between EMR adoption and the outcomes of minority patients, specifically black patients. However, after controlling for patient and hospital characteristics we could not find any significant changes in the four health outcomes of minority patients before and after EMR implementation. CONCLUSIONS: EMR systems have been reported to support better coordinated care, thus encouraging appropriate treatment for minority patients by removing potential sources of bias from providers. Also, EMR systems may improve the quality of care provided to patients via increased responsiveness to care processes that are required to be more time-sensitive and through improved communication. However, we did not find any significant benefit for minority groups after EMR adoption.
Bias (Epidemiology)
;
Delivery of Health Care
;
Electronic Health Records
;
Humans
;
Inpatients
;
Length of Stay
;
Linear Models
;
Medicare
;
Minority Groups
;
Minority Health*
;
Mortality
4.Association of EMR Adoption with Minority Health Care Outcome Disparities in US Hospitals.
Jae Young CHOI ; Yong Fang KUO ; James S GOODWIN ; Jinhyung LEE
Healthcare Informatics Research 2016;22(2):101-109
OBJECTIVES: Disparities in healthcare among minority groups can result in disparate treatments for similar severities of symptoms, unequal access to medical care, and a wide deviation in health outcomes. Such racial disparities may be reduced via use of an Electronic Medical Record (EMR) system. However, there has been little research investigating the impact of EMR systems on the disparities in health outcomes among minority groups. METHODS: This study examined the impact of EMR systems on the following four outcomes of black patients: length of stay, inpatient mortality rate, 30-day mortality rate, and 30-day readmission rate, using patient and hospital data from the Medicare Provider Analysis and Review and the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society between 2000 and 2007. The difference-in-difference research method was employed with a generalized linear model to examine the association of EMR adoption on health outcomes for minority patients while controlling for patient and hospital characteristics. RESULTS: We examined the association between EMR adoption and the outcomes of minority patients, specifically black patients. However, after controlling for patient and hospital characteristics we could not find any significant changes in the four health outcomes of minority patients before and after EMR implementation. CONCLUSIONS: EMR systems have been reported to support better coordinated care, thus encouraging appropriate treatment for minority patients by removing potential sources of bias from providers. Also, EMR systems may improve the quality of care provided to patients via increased responsiveness to care processes that are required to be more time-sensitive and through improved communication. However, we did not find any significant benefit for minority groups after EMR adoption.
Bias (Epidemiology)
;
Delivery of Health Care
;
Electronic Health Records
;
Humans
;
Inpatients
;
Length of Stay
;
Linear Models
;
Medicare
;
Minority Groups
;
Minority Health*
;
Mortality
6.Correlation between the atypical presentation of myasthenia gravis and radio-pathological classification of the thymus – A retrospective cohort study
Kang-Po Lee ; Chou-Ching K. Lin ; Pei-Fang Su ; Yu-Lin Mau ; Fei-Ci Sie ; Han-Wei Huang
Neurology Asia 2020;25(3):293-298
Myasthenia gravis (MG) is a disease of neuromuscular junction and mainly autoimmune in aetiology.
The state of thymus is a critical determinant for the prognosis. In this retrospective review study, we
aimed at clarifying the relationship between the mode of clinical presentation of MG and the radiopathological classification of the thymus. We identified patients with MG from the database of our
medical center from 1988 – 2017. The patients were classified into two groups according to their
clinical presentation: those with a typical presentation with diurnal variation, and those with an atypical
presentation of persistent weakness or respiratory failure from the beginning. The underlying thymic
state was categorized into six groups: normal, abnormal by imaging (if no operation was performed),
hyperplasia, benign thymoma, cortical type thymoma, and malignant thymoma. In total, 227 patients
(133 females and 94 males) were included in the analysis, of whom 68% were classified into the
typical presentation group. The atypical presentation correlated significantly with thymic categories
(p = 0.014) and sex (p = 0.026) but not age at onset (p = 0.232). The atypical presentation was more
common in the male patients and in those with thymic carcinoma.
7.Conditions and Patterns of Intimate Partner Violence among Taiwanese Women.
Fang Hsin LEE ; Yung Mei YANG ; Hsiu Hung WANG ; Joh Jong HUANG ; Shu Chen CHANG
Asian Nursing Research 2015;9(2):91-95
PURPOSE: Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a serious public health issue among women. IPV victims usually seek help from hospitals, and emergency nurses are the frontline staff with whom the victims come into contact first. This study examined the conditions and patterns of IPV in southern Taiwan. METHODS: From designated hospitals in Kaohsiung under the Department of Health Injury Assessment Clinic, data were collected on 497 women regarding their injury assessment for IPV reported to the Kaohsiung City Government. RESULTS: Taiwanese survivors were older compared to immigrant survivors. Taiwanese survivors also had higher education levels compared to immigrant survivors. Taiwanese survivors had higher employment rate than immigrant survivors did. The time between IPV and medical help seeking was longer for divorced than married women. CONCLUSIONS: These results can facilitate understanding of the conditions and patterns of IPV in Taiwan, increase the awareness of nurses, especially the emergency nurses for the prevention of IPV, and increase professional competency for the provision of appropriate healthcare services to survivors of IPV.
Adolescent
;
Adult
;
Aged
;
Aged, 80 and over
;
Battered Women/*statistics & numerical data
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Intimate Partner Violence/*statistics & numerical data
;
Middle Aged
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Risk Factors
;
Taiwan/epidemiology
;
Young Adult
8.Diabetes Management and Hypoglycemia in Safety Sensitive Jobs.
See Muah LEE ; David KOH ; Winnie KL CHUI ; Chee Fang SUM
Safety and Health at Work 2011;2(1):9-16
The majority of people diagnosed with diabetes mellitus are in the working age group in developing countries. The interrelationship of diabetes and work, that is, diabetes affecting work and work affecting diabetes, becomes an important issue for these people. Therapeutic options for the diabetic worker have been developed, and currently include various insulins, insulin sensitizers and secretagogues, incretin mimetics and enhancers, and alpha glucosidase inhibitors. Hypoglycemia and hypoglycaemic unawareness are important and unwanted treatment side effects. The risk they pose with respect to cognitive impairment can have safety implications. The understanding of the therapeutic options in the management of diabetic workers, blood glucose awareness training, and self-monitoring blood glucose will help to mitigate this risk. Employment decisions must also take into account the extent to which the jobs performed by the worker are safety sensitive. A risk assessment matrix, based on the extent to which a job is considered safety sensitive and based on the severity of the hypoglycaemia, may assist in determining one's fitness to work. Support at the workplace, such as a provision of healthy food options and arrangements for affected workers will be helpful for such workers. Arrangements include permission to carry and consume emergency sugar, flexible meal times, self-monitoring blood glucose when required, storage/disposal facilities for medicine such as insulin and needles, time off for medical appointments, and structured self-help programs.
alpha-Glucosidases
;
Appointments and Schedules
;
Blood Glucose
;
Developing Countries
;
Diabetes Mellitus
;
Emergencies
;
Employment
;
Humans
;
Hypoglycemia
;
Incretins
;
Insulin
;
Insulins
;
Meals
;
Needles
;
Risk Assessment
9.Influencing Factors of Intention to Receive Pap Tests in Vietnamese Women who Immigrated to Taiwan for Marriage.
Fang Hsin LEE ; Hsiu Hung WANG ; Yung Mei YANG ; Joh Jong HUANG ; Hsiu Min TSAI
Asian Nursing Research 2016;10(3):189-194
PURPOSE: This study aimed to explore the factors associated with the intention to receive a Pap test among married immigrant women of Vietnamese origin living in Taiwan. METHODS: This was a cross-sectional community-based study.We enrolled 281 women aged 30 years and over in the study, from July 2013 to January 2014. The participants' characteristics, cervical cancer knowledge, Pap test knowledge, attitudes toward cervical cancer, barriers to receiving a Pap test, fatalism, and intention to receive a Pap test, were measured using self-report questionnaires. Hierarchical multiple regression analyses were performed to examine the variables associated with participants' intentions to receive a Pap test. RESULTS: Vietnamese women with low scores on the measures of cervical cancer knowledge and perceived barriers to receiving a Pap test were more willing to receive the test, as were those with high scores on the measures of Pap test knowledge and fatalism. Women who received a Pap test in the previous year were more willing to receive a Pap test within the next 3 years. CONCLUSIONS: Preventive healthcare for immigrant women should be a focus of nurses. The development of culturally appropriate health education and strategies should enhance their knowledge of Pap tests and reduce perceived barriers to Pap test participation. This study's results can be a reference for nurses who work with immigrant women.
Adult
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Emigrants and Immigrants/*psychology
;
Emigration and Immigration
;
Female
;
Humans
;
*Intention
;
Marriage/psychology
;
Papanicolaou Test/*psychology
;
Patient Acceptance of Health Care/*psychology
;
Self Report
;
Socioeconomic Factors
;
Taiwan/epidemiology
;
Vietnam/ethnology
10.Hypolipidemic and hypoglycemic effects of Orostachys japonicus A. Berger extracts in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats.
Soo Jung LEE ; Gui Fang ZHANG ; Nak Ju SUNG
Nutrition Research and Practice 2011;5(4):301-307
The hypolipidemic and hypoglycemic effects of two dietary dosages (0.1% and 0.5%) of water and 80% ethanol extracts from hot-air dried Orostachys japonicus A. Berger were evaluated in the serum and organ tissues of streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. The STZ-induced diabetic groups supplemented with the O. japonicus extracts showed significantly higher body weight compared to a diabetic control group at the end of experiment. The extracts exhibited substantial hypoglycemic effects by significant reductions of fasting blood glucose levels at all time points tested compared to the initial stage before treatment of the extracts. Declines of serum and hepatic triglyceride levels were greater than declines of total cholesterol in the groups treated with the 0.5% O. japonicus extract (DBW2 and DBE2) when compared to the DBC group. Hepatic glycogen content was higher in the groups treated with O. japonicus extract, while lipid peroxide content was decreased in these treated groups compared to the DBC group. Hepatic antioxidant activity was significantly increased in the groups supplemented with the O. japonicus ethanol extract. The hypolipidemic and hypoglycemic effects of the O. japonicus ethanol extract were significantly greater than the effects of the water extract. Based on this study, it seems that O. japonicus ethanol extract, due to its higher phenolic and flavonoid components than the water extract, may control blood glucose and alleviate hyperlipidemia in diabetes.
Animals
;
Blood Glucose
;
Body Weight
;
Cholesterol
;
Ethanol
;
Fasting
;
Hyperlipidemias
;
Hypoglycemic Agents
;
Liver Glycogen
;
Phenol
;
Rats
;
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
;
Water