1.Development and Effects of a Sex Education Program with Blended Learning for University Students.
Il Ok KIM ; Gye Jeong YEOM ; Mi Jeong KIM
Child Health Nursing Research 2018;24(4):443-453
PURPOSE: This study was describes the development and implementation a sex education program with a blended learning method for university students. METHODS: Sixty-eight university students were recruited either to the experimental group (n=35) or the control group (n=33). This program was developed based on the analysis, design, development, implementation, and evaluation model. The analysis phase consisted of a literature review, focus group interview, expert consultations, and target group survey. In addition, learning objectives and structure were designed, and a printed text-book, presentation slides, cross-word puzzle, and debate topics were developed. In the implementation phase, the program was conducted 3 times over the course of 3 weeks. The evaluation phase involved verification of the effects of the program on sex-related knowledge, sexual autonomy, and justification of violence, as well as an assessment of satisfaction with the program. RESULTS: The experimental group had significantly higher scores on sex-related knowledge (t=5.47, p < .001), sexual autonomy (t=2.40, p=.019), and justification of violence (t=2.52, p=.015) than the control group. CONCLUSION: The results indicate that this sex education program with blended learning was effective in meeting the needs of university students and can be widely used in this context.
Focus Groups
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Humans
;
Learning*
;
Methods
;
Referral and Consultation
;
Sex Education*
;
Violence
2.Factors Affecting Musculoskeletal Symptoms of Teachers in Child Care Centers.
Korean Journal of Occupational Health Nursing 2015;24(3):162-172
PURPOSE: This study was to explore factors affecting musculoskeletal symptoms of the child care centers' teachers in Korea. METHODS: This study was a descriptive research, using a cross-sectional survey. Convenience samples of 230 child care centers' teachers aged 20 to 65 were selected. A self-administered questionnaire was used to measure general characteristics, job-related characteristics, exercise habit, fatigue and musculoskeletal symptoms of the body parts. The data were analyzed with the SPSS/WIN 21.0 program. RESULTS: Shoulder pain (73.5%), low back pain (72.6%) and wrist/hand pain (57.8%) were the most common musculoskeletal symptoms. Shoulder pain significantly differed depending on the age of children in charge at the child care center (p<.047). The exercise habit was related to low back pain (p<.028) and the career was linked to wrist/hand pain (p<.046). The logistic regression analysis revealed exercise habit and fatigue were the risk factors on musculoskeletal symptoms of many body parts. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that interventions targeting the child care centers' teachers should be considered job-related characteristics and fatigue in order to prevent musculoskeletal disorder. Thus, there continues to be a need to develop exercise program for the child care centers' teachers.
Child
;
Child Care*
;
Child*
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Fatigue
;
Human Body
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Logistic Models
;
Low Back Pain
;
Risk Factors
;
Shoulder Pain
3.Experience of Pregnant Women with Problem Drinking during First Trimester of Pregnancy.
Il Ok KIM ; Gye Jeong YEOM ; Jung Yeol HAN
Korean Journal of Women Health Nursing 2017;23(4):276-286
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to explore the meaning of pregnant women's experiences with drinking alcohol during first trimester of pregnancy METHODS: The data were collected through in-depth interviews of 7 pregnant women who drank alcohol in the first trimester. Giorgi's phenomenological method was used for data analysis. RESULTS: Findings included 6 main themes and 14 themes. The main themes concerning pregnancy and drinking were: ‘Open attitude in drinking, History of drinking in family or spouse, Seeking information in how drinking affects pregnancy, Regret not doing planned pregnancy and not quitting drinking before pregnancy, Willing to stop drinking until the child birth, Awareness about importance of preconception care. CONCLUSION: The results of this study provide a deeper understanding of pregnant women's experiences of drinking alcohol during the first trimester of pregnancy. These results can be used in the development of strategies to prevent drinking alcohol during first trimester and to support preconception care and prenatal care.
Binge Drinking
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Child
;
Drinking*
;
Family Planning Services
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Methods
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Parturition
;
Preconception Care
;
Pregnancy
;
Pregnancy Trimester, First*
;
Pregnancy*
;
Pregnant Women*
;
Prenatal Care
;
Spouses
;
Statistics as Topic
4.Development and Effects of Supplementary Material about Electronic Fetal Monitoring for Nursing Students.
Korean Journal of Women Health Nursing 2016;22(1):21-29
PURPOSE: This study aimed to develop supplementary material about the electronic fetal monitoring for nursing students, and to test the effects on electronic fetal monitoring related knowledge and confidence on nursing performance in delivery room. METHODS: Totally 58 nursing students were recruited either experimental group (n=30) or a control group (n=28). A non-equivalent control group pretest-posttest design was employed to test the effects on fetal monitoring related knowledge and confidence on nursing performance in delivery room. The supplementary material about the electronic fetal monitoring was developed based on Analysis, Design, Development, Implement and Evaluation (ADDIE) model. Fetal monitoring related knowledge and confidence on nursing performance in delivery room were self-reported by the scales that author developed. Data were collected at pre-test and after the 6-week intervention. RESULTS: There was significant difference in confidence on nursing performance in delivery room between two groups after intervention. CONCLUSION: These findings suggest the importance of the supplementary material about the electronic fetal monitoring for nursing students to improve confidence on nursing performance in delivery room.
Delivery Rooms
;
Fetal Monitoring*
;
Humans
;
Nursing*
;
Students, Nursing*
;
Weights and Measures
5.Development of Preconception Health Behavior Scale
Korean Journal of Women Health Nursing 2019;25(1):31-45
PURPOSE: This study was designed to develop a valid and reliable scale for the evaluation of preconception health behavior in women preparing for pregnancy. METHODS: The initial strategy included a literature review, interviews, and construction of a conceptual framework. The preliminary items were evaluated twice for content validity by experts, and modified two preliminary investigations. Participants in the 2 main investigations and the confirmation investigation were tested for reliability and validity of the preliminary scale in women preparing for pregnancy. The data were analyzed for different items exploratory and confirmatory factors. RESULTS: The 5-point Likert scale consisted of 6 factors and 27 items. The 6-factors included ‘hazardous substance factor,’ ‘medical management factor,’ ‘rest and sleep factor,’ ‘stress management factor,’ ‘information acquisition factor,’ and ‘resource preparation factor.’ Goodness of fit of the final research model was very appropriate and based on the following measures: Q=1.98, comparative fit index=.91, Tucker-lewis index=.89, standardized root mean square residual=.07, and root mean square error of approximation=.07. The criterion validity was .64. The reliability coefficient was .92 and the test-retest reliability was .61. CONCLUSION: The study findings indicate that the scale can be used for the development of nursing interventions to promote preconception health behavior in women preparing for pregnancy.
Behavior Rating Scale
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Female
;
Health Behavior
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Humans
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Nursing
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Preconception Care
;
Pregnancy
;
Reproducibility of Results
6.Evaluation of Nutrition Education for Preschool Children Using Picture-Questionnaire.
Saet Byol HONG ; Hae Ryun PARK ; Gyeong Ah GO ; Gye Ok JEONG ; Kyung Hee SONG
Korean Journal of Community Nutrition 2010;15(4):475-484
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of the nutrition education on preschool children's nutrition knowledge and behaviors. The study subjects were preschool children attending J kindergarten located in Wonju. Each of the control group and the education group consisted of 49 children and the education group was exposed to nutrition education while the control group did not. The nutrition education intervention lasted 9 weeks weekly basis. The t-test for the homogeneity of each group showed no meaningful difference at the beginning point of nutrition education. After nutrition education a test of nutrition knowledge using picture-questionnaire was carried out by the researcher for the subjects of education group and control group and the caretakers of the education group were offered self-administered questionnaire on the changes in children's dietary behaviors. The results of the study were as follows: 1. Nutrition education intervention showed a meaningful difference in children's understanding nutrition; the kinds and function of food, the relationship between food and body, the function of nutrients and enhanced their idea on hygiene compared to the control group (p < p.005). 2. However, nutrition education intervention made no statistically meaningful difference in children's dietary behaviors such as having breakfast, keeping balanced diet, washing hands before meals, saying "thanks" before and after meals, cleaning the table after meals, brushing teeth after meals and so on. Therefore, we found that it is hard to expect children to correct their dietary behaviors in such a short period of 9 weeks and nutrition education for preschool children should be offered to caretakers at the same time.
Breakfast
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Child
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Child, Preschool
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Diet
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Hand
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Humans
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Hygiene
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Meals
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Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Tooth
7.Workers intake too much salt from dishes of eating out and food service cafeterias; direct chemical analysis of sodium content.
Hae Ryun PARK ; Gye Ok JEONG ; Seung Lim LEE ; Jin Young KIM ; Soon Ah KANG ; Kun Young PARK ; Hyun Joo RYOU
Nutrition Research and Practice 2009;3(4):328-333
The average sodium intake of Koreans was reported to be 5,279.9 mg/day, which is one of the highest intake levels worldwide. The average Koreans intake 19.6% of sodium from kimchi, showing kimchi as the main contributor of sodium in this country (Ministry of Health and Welfare, 2005). The sodium content of dishes that are frequently chosen by workers, and which were served by foodservice cafeterias were chemically analyzed. The average sodium content of one meal provided by 10 foodservice cafeterias was 2,777.7 mg. Twenty-one, one-dish-meals, frequently chosen by workers for a lunch menu, were collected at 4 different restaurants for each menu by one male, aged in the twenties and analyzed chemically also. Workers who eat lunch at a workplace cafeteria everyday could intake about 8 g of salt at a one-time meal and those who eat out for a one-dish-meal would intake 3-8 g of salt without counting sodium content from the side dishes. From these study results, one could estimate that over 10 g of salt could be possible for a single meal for workers who eat out everyday. A nationwide nutrition campaign and education for low salt diets for restaurant owners and foodservice providers should be seriously considered.
Aged
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Diet
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Eating
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Food Services
;
Humans
;
Lunch
;
Male
;
Meals
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Restaurants
;
Sodium
8.A comparison of fracture strengths of porcelain-fused-to-titanium crown among titanium surface coating treatments.
Ji Hye KIM ; Sang Won PARK ; Mong Sook VANG ; Hong So YANG ; Ha Ok PARK ; Hyun Pil LIM ; Gye Jeong OH ; Hyun Seung KIM ; Kwang Min LEE ; Kyung Ku LEE
The Journal of Korean Academy of Prosthodontics 2007;45(2):203-215
STATEMENT OF PROBLEM: Titanium and its alloy, with their excellent bio-compatibility and above average resistance to corrosion, have been widely used in the field of dentistry. However, the excessive oxidization of titanium which occurs during the process of firing on porcelain makes the bonding of titanium and porcelain more difficult than that of the conventional metal-porcelain bonding. To solve this problem related to titanium-porcelain bonding, several methods which modify the surfaces, coat the surfaces of titanium with various pure metals and ceramics, to enable the porcelain adhesive by limiting the diffusion of oxygen and forming the adhesive oxides surfaces, have been investigated. PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to know whether the titanium-porcelain bonding strength could be enhanced by treating the titanium surface with gold and TiN followed by fabrication of clinically applicable porcelain-fused-to-titanium crown. MATERIAL AND METHOD: The porcelain-fused-to-titanium crown was fabricated after sandblasting the surface of the casting titanium coping with Al2O3 and treating the surface with gold and TiN coating followed by condensation and firing of ultra-low fusing porcelain. To compare with porcelain-fused-to-titanium crowns, porcelain-fused-to-gold crowns were fabricated and used as control groups. The bonding strengths of porcelain-fused-to-gold crowns and porcelain-fused-totitanium crowns were set for comparison when the porcelain was fractured on purpose to get the experimental value of fracture strength. Then, the surface were examined by SEM and each fracturing pattern were compared with each other. RESULT: Those results are as follows. 1. The highest value of fracture strength of porcelain-fused-to-titanium crowns was in the order of group with gold coating, group with TiN coating, group with Al2O3 sandblasting. No statistically significant difference was found among the three (P>.05). 2. The porcelain-fused-to-gold crowns showed the highest value in bonding strength. The bonding strength of crowns porcelain-fused-to-titanium crowns of rest groups showed bonding strength reaching only 85%-94% of that of PFG, though simple comparision seemed unacceptable due to the difference in materials used. 3. The fracturing patterns between metal and porcelain showed mixed type of failure behavior including cohesive failure and adhesive failure as a similar patterns by examination with the naked eye and SEM. But porcelain-fused-to-gold crowns showed high incidence of adhesive failure and porcelain-fused-to-titanium crowns showed high incidence of cohesive failure. CONCLUSION: Above results proved that when fabricating porcelain-fused-to-titanium crowns, treating casting titanium surface with gold or TiN was able to enhance the bonding strength between titanium and porcelain. Mean value of masticatory force was found to showed clinically acceptable values in porcelain bonding strength in all three groups. However, more experimental studies and evaluations should be done in order to get better porcelain bonding strength and various surface coating methods that can be applied on titanium surface with ease.
Adhesives
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Alloys
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Bite Force
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Ceramics
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Corrosion
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Crowns*
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Dental Porcelain
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Dentistry
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Diffusion
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Fires
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Incidence
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Metals
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Oxides
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Oxygen
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Tin
;
Titanium*
9.Effect of surface roughness on bond strength in titanium-porcelain system.
Sang Hun KIM ; Mong Sook VANG ; Hong So YANG ; Sang Won PARK ; Ha Ok PARK ; Hyun Pil LIM ; Gye Jeong OH
The Journal of Korean Academy of Prosthodontics 2007;45(2):182-190
STATEMENT OF PROBLEM: Titanium has many advantages of high biocompatibility, physical properties, low-weight, low price and radiolucency, but it is incompatible with conventional dental porcelain due to titanium's oxidative nature. Many previous studies have shown that they used the method of sandblast for surface treatment prior to porcelain application, the researches are processing about the method of acid etching or surface coating. PURPOSE: The purpose of this research is to study the effect on bond strength of surface roughness between titanium and porcelain with the same surface topography. MATERIAL AND METHOD: In this study, we evaluated the bond strength by using 3-point bending test based on ISO 9693 after classified 8 groups - group P : polished with #1200 grit SiC paper, group S10 : 1.0 micrometer surface roughness with sandblasting, group S15 : 1.5 micrometer surface roughness with sandblasting, group S20 : 2.0 micrometer surface roughness with sandblasting, group S25 : 2.5 micrometer surface roughness with sandblasting, group S30 : 3.0 micrometer surface roughness with sandblasting, group S35 : 3.5 micrometer surface roughness with sandblasting, group E : 1.0 micrometer surface roughness with HCl etching. RESULTS: Within the confines of our research, the following results can be deduced. 1. In the results of 3-point bending test, the bond strength of sandblasting group showed significant differences from one of polishing group, acid etching group(P<.05). 2. The bond strength of sandblasting groups did not show significant differences. 3. After surface treatments, the group treated with sandblasting showed irregular aspect formed many undercuts, in the SEM photographs. The bond strength of sandblasting group was higher than 25 MPa, the requirement of ISO 9693. CONCLUSION: In above results, bond strength of titanium and low-fusing porcelain is influenced more to surface aspect than surface roughness. And titanium has clinically acceptable bond strength below surface roughness of 3.5 micrometer.
Dental Porcelain
;
Titanium
10.The bond characteristics of porcelain fused by titanium surface modification.
Taek Huw CHOI ; Sang Won PARK ; Mong Sook VANG ; Hong So YANG ; Ha Ok PARK ; Hyun Pil LIM ; Gye Jeong OH ; Hyun Seung KIM ; Kwang Min LEE ; Kyung Ku LEE
The Journal of Korean Academy of Prosthodontics 2007;45(2):169-181
STATEMENT OF PROBLEM: Titanium is well known as a proper metal for the dental restorations, because it has an excellent biocompatibility, resistance to corrosion, and mechanical property. However, adhesion between titanium and dental porcelains is related to the diffusion of oxygen to the reaction layers formed on cast-titanium surfaces during porcelain firing and those oxidized layers make the adhesion difficult to be formed. Many studies using mechanical, chemical and physical methods to enhance the titanium-ceramic adhesion have been actively performed. PURPOSE: This study meant to comparatively analyse the adhesion characteristics depending on different titanium surface coatings after coating the casts and wrought titanium surfaces with Au and TiN. MATERIAL AND METHOD: In this study, the titanium specimens (CP-Ti, Grade 2, Kobe still Co. Japan) were categorized into cast and wrought titanium. The wrought titanium was cast by using the MgO-based investment(Selevest CB, Selec). The cast and wrought titanium were treated with Au coating(ParaOne(R), Gold Ion Sputter, Model PS-1200) and TiN coating(ATEC system, Korea) and the ultra low fusing dental porcelain was fused and fired onto the samples. Biaxial flection test was done on the fired samples and the porcelain was separated. The adhesion characteristics of porcelain and titanium after firing and the specimen surfaces before and after the porcelain fracture test were observed with SEM. The atomic percent of Si on all sample surfaces was comparatively analysed by EDS. In addition, the constituents of specimen surface layers after the porcelain fracture and the formed compound were evaluated by X-ray diffraction diagnosis. RESULT: The results of this study were obtained as follows : 1. The surface characteristics of cast and wrought titanium after surface treatment(Au, TiN, Al2O3 sandblasting) were similar and each cast and wrought titanium showed similar bonding characteristics. 2. Before and after the biaxial flection test, the highest atomic weight change of Si component was found in Al2O3 sandblasted wrought titanium(28.6at.% --> 8.3at.%). On the other hand, the least change was seen in Au-Pd-In alloy(24.5at.%--> 19.1at.%). 3. Much amount of Si components was uniformly distributed in Au and TiN coated titanium, but less amount of Si's was unevenly dispersed on Al2O3 sandblasting surfaces. 4. In X-ray diffraction diagnosis after porcelain debonding, we could see Au2Ti compound and TiN coating layers on Au and TiN coated surfaces and TiO2, typical oxide of titanium, on all titanium surfaces. 5. Debonding of porcelain on cast and wrought titanium surface after the biaxial flection is considered as a result of adhesion deterioration between coating layers and titanium surfaces. We found that there are both adhesive failure and cohesive failure at the same time. CONCLUSION: These results showed that the titanium-ceramic adhesion could be improved by coating cast and wrought titanium surfaces with Au and TiN when making porcelain fused to metal crowns. In order to use porcelain fused to titanium clinically, it is considered that coating technique to enhance the bonding strength between coating kKlayers and titanium surfaces should be developed first.
Adhesives
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Corrosion
;
Crowns
;
Dental Porcelain*
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Diagnosis
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Diffusion
;
Fires
;
Hand
;
Oxygen
;
Tin
;
Titanium*
;
X-Ray Diffraction