1.Untact Visit Service Development Based on an Application Reflecting the Circumstances during COVID-19: Focusing on Utilization in the Pediatric Intensive Care Units
Dahae WOO ; Hanui YU ; Hyo Jin KIM ; Minyoung CHOI ; Dong Hee KIM
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2021;51(5):573-584
Purpose:
This study aimed to develop an untact visit service based on an application that can be utilized in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) during COVID-19.
Methods:
This study adopted the double diamond process of service design comprising the discovery, defining, and development stages.
Results:
We developed an untact visit service based on an application that considered the child’s status, schedule, photo, and video messages, and so on. Moreover, we derived a service flow regarding the required roles and the type of flow shown between each stakeholder.
Conclusion
Considering the ongoing pandemic, the untact visit service is designed to increase rapport and participation of parents, share the child’s information in real-time, and provide one-stop service without increasing healthcare providers’ work. It will be a useful visit service that can be applied and evaluated in various hospital settings and the PICU.
2.Establishing a Table of Glycemic Index Values for Common Korean Foods and an Evaluation of the Dietary Glycemic Index among the Korean Adult Population.
SuJin SONG ; Hanui CHOI ; Saya LEE ; Jeong min PARK ; Bo Ra KIM ; Hee Young PAIK ; YoonJu SONG
The Korean Journal of Nutrition 2012;45(1):80-93
Recent studies have reported that the glycemic index (GI) has an effect on developing the risk for metabolic abnormalities such as diabetes, dyslipidemia, and obesity. As there are no reliable GI values for common Korean foods, only a few studies have been carried out using the dietary GI for Korean adults. The aim of this study was to establish a table of GI values for common Korean foods and evaluate dietary glycemic index (DGI) and dietary glycemic load (DGL) among the Korean adult population. International tables of GI values and other published values were used to tabulate GI values for common Korean foods. Among 653 food items, 149 (22.8%) were adapted from published data, 60 (9.2%) were imputed from similar foods, and 444 (68.0%) were assigned a zero. Data from 7,940 subjects aged 20 years and older in the 2007-2008 Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey were obtained, and DGI and DGL were calculated. The average DGI was 60.0 and the average DGL was 182.5 when the reference food GI value was glucose. After adjusting for potential confounding variables, DGI and DGL increased significantly according to age group (p for trend < 0.001). The food group that contributed most to DGL was grain and its products supplying 85.3% of total DGL, whereas the mean GI value in grain and its products was 72.6. Fruits and potatoes also contributed to DGL (5.8 and 2.9%, respectively), and their GIs were high (67.7 for potatoes and 45.8 for fruits). For individual food items, white rice supplied 66.7% of total GI followed by glutinous rice (2.3%) and steamed white rice cakes (2.0%). In conclusion, a table of GI values for 653 common food items was established in which white rice was the most contributing item to DGL. Our results will be useful to examine the relationships between DGI, DGL, and metabolic abnormalities in the Korean population.
Adult
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Aged
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Confounding Factors (Epidemiology)
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Dyslipidemias
;
Edible Grain
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Fruit
;
Glucose
;
Glycemic Index
;
Humans
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Korea
;
Nutrition Surveys
;
Obesity
;
Solanum tuberosum
;
Steam
3.ABO Genotyping of a Neonate with Mixed Field Agglutination.
Ju Yeon KIM ; Hanui KIM ; Jae Yeoul CHOI ; Yoon Ho KIM ; Jang Su KIM ; Myung Han KIM ; Young Ki KIM ; Kap No LEE ; Chae Seung LIM
Korean Journal of Blood Transfusion 2011;22(2):171-176
Mixed field agglutination is an important, but rare phenomenon of ABO blood grouping. Contrary to adults, neonatal red blood cells are immature and they present a weak ABO expression, and sometimes this result in a mixed field agglutination pattern. We report here on a case of a neonate who presented with mixed field agglutination on the ABO blood grouping during serologic testing and the neonate had a normal ABO genotype.
Adult
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Agglutination
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Blood Grouping and Crossmatching
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Erythrocytes
;
Genotype
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Humans
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Infant, Newborn
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Serologic Tests