1.A Case of Common Variable Immune Deficiency Presenting as Recurrent Pneumococcal Pneumonia.
Juhong JEONG ; Jae Hwa CHO ; Haesung NAM ; Jeong Seon RYU ; Sung Min KWAK ; Hong Lyeol LEE
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases 2011;71(4):282-285
Common variable immune deficiency (CVID) is the most common primary immune deficiency, which is manifested as chronic recurrent respiratory infections and hypoglobulinemia. CVID usually presents in the second or third decade of life. A 33-year-old woman was admitted with recurrent pneumococcal pneumonia with bacteremia and had very low levels of serum immunoglobulin G, M and A. This case emphasized a high index of suspiciousness for diagnosis of CVID in a mid-adulthood patient presenting with recurrent pneumonia with hypoglobulinemia.
Adult
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B-Lymphocytes
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Bacteremia
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Common Variable Immunodeficiency
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Female
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Humans
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Immunoglobulin G
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Pneumonia
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Pneumonia, Pneumococcal
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Respiratory Tract Infections
2.ICT-Based Comprehensive Health and Social-Needs Assessment System for Supporting Person-Centered Community Care
Myonghwa PARK ; Eun Jeong CHOI ; Miri JEONG ; Nayoung LEE ; Minjung KWAK ; Mihyun LEE ; Eun Chung LIM ; Haesung NAM ; Dongil KIM ; Hanwool KU ; Bong Seok YANG ; Junsik NA ; Joong Shik JANG ; Ji Young KIM ; Wonpyo LEE
Healthcare Informatics Research 2019;25(4):338-343
OBJECTIVES: This study developed an information and communication technology (ICT)-based comprehensive health and social-needs assessment (CHSNA) system based on the International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health (ICF) with the aim of enhancing person-centered community care for community residents and supporting healthcare professionals and social workers who provide healthcare and social services in the community. METHODS: Items related to a CHSNA tool were developed and mapped with ICF codes. Experts validated the CHSNA system design and process using the Delphi method, and a pilot test of the initial version of the system was conducted. RESULTS: The following three steps of CHSNA were embedded in the system, which had a user-friendly screen and images: basic health assessment, life and activity assessment, and in-depth health assessment. The assessment results for the community residents were presented with visualized health profiles, including images, graphs, and an ICF model. CONCLUSIONS: The developed CHSNA system can be used by healthcare professionals, social workers, and community residents to evaluate the reasoning underlying health and social needs, to facilitate the identification of more appropriate healthcare plans, and to guide community residents to receive the best healthcare services. A CHSNA system can improve the implementation of standardized terminology utilizing the ICF and the accuracy of needs assessments of community residents.
Classification
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Community Health Services
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Decision Support Techniques
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Delivery of Health Care
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Methods
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Needs Assessment
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Patient-Centered Care
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Social Work
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Social Workers
3.Children’s Hepatic Tumors International Collaboration-Hepatoblastoma Stratification (CHIC-HS) System for Pediatric Patients with Hepatoblastoma: A Retrospective, Hospital-Based Cohort Study in South Korea
Pyeong Hwa KIM ; Hyun Joo SHIN ; Hee Mang YOON ; Young Hun CHOI ; Jung-Man NAMGOONG ; Dae Yeon KIM ; Kyung-Nam KOH ; Mi-Jung LEE ; Haesung YOON ; Chuhl Joo LYU ; Jung Woo HAN ; Seung Min HAHN ; Young Ah CHO
Cancer Research and Treatment 2022;54(1):253-258
Purpose:
In 2017, the Children’s Hepatic Tumors International Collaboration-Hepatoblastoma Stratification (CHIC-HS) system was introduced. We aimed to evaluate the accuracy of CHIC-HS System for the prediction of event-free survival (EFS) in Korean pediatric patients with hepatoblastoma.
Materials and Methods:
This two-center retrospective study included consecutive Korean pediatric patients with histopathologically confirmed hepatoblastoma from March 1988 through September 2019. We compared EFS among four risk groups according to the CHIC-HS system. Discriminatory ability of CHIC-HS system was also evaluated using optimism-corrected C-statistics. Factors associated with EFS were explored using multivariable Cox regression analysis.
Results:
We included 129 patients (mean age, 2.6±3.3 years; female:male, 63:66). The 5-year EFS rates in the very low, low, intermediate, and high-risk groups, according to the CHIC-HS system were 90.0%, 82.8%, 73.5%, and 51.3%, respectively. The CHIC-HS system aligned significantly well with EFS outcomes (p=0.004). The optimism-corrected C index of CHIC-HS was 0.644 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.561 to 0.727). Age ≥ 8 (vs. age ≤ 2; hazard ratio [HR], 2.781; 95% CI, 1.187 to 6.512; p=0.018), PRE-Treatment EXTent of tumor (PRETEXT) stage IV (vs. PRETEXT I or II; HR, 2.774; 95% CI, 1.228 to 5.974; p=0.009), and presence of metastasis (HR, 2.886; 95% CI, 1.457 to 5.719; p=0.002), which are incorporated as the first three nodes in the CHIC-HS system, were independently associated with EFS.
Conclusion
The CHIC-HS system aligned significantly well with EFS outcomes in Korean pediatric patients with hepatoblastoma. Age group, PRETEXT stage, and presence of metastasis were independently associated with EFS.