1.Intervention Efficacy of Mother Training on Social Reciprocity for Children with Autism.
Dae Young WON ; Hye Kyeung SEUNG ; Jennifer ELDER
Korean Journal of Child Health Nursing 2005;11(4):444-455
PURPOSE: This study examined the efficacy of parent training interventions to facilitate social reciprocity and language development in children with autism. METHODS: The social interaction behaviors of mothers and children over time were compared using single subject design experimentation methodology. Five children who were diagnosed with autism and their mothers participated in the study. The participants were recruited from U city, Korea. The mothers were trained using training videotapes and demonstrations on how to facilitate social interaction with their children as well as promoting language development. Following the training, data were collected three times per week by video taping mother-child interaction in their homes. RESULTS: Four of the five mothers demonstrated increases in the use of imitation with animation and expectant waiting after the intervention compared to the baseline sessions; the children demonstrated noticeable increases in the use of initiation of interaction, vocalizations, and verbal production after their mothers received the training intervention. CONCLUSION: Results of this study demonstrate the efficacy of mother training to improve social interactions of children with autism. Additional important information can be gained by replicating this study with more participants and comparing intervention and control groups. Clearly, this intervention shows promise and has implications for clinical practice.
Autistic Disorder*
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Child*
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Humans
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Interpersonal Relations
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Korea
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Language Development
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Mother-Child Relations
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Mothers*
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Parents
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Videotape Recording
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Child Health
2.Sessile Serrated Adenoma with High-grade Dysplasia.
Kyoung Joo KWON ; Sung Ae JUNG ; Ki Nam SHIM ; Jung Hwa CHUNG ; Seok Hyung KANG ; Do Kyeung SONG ; Seung Jung JUN ; Hye In KIM
The Ewha Medical Journal 2012;35(1):44-48
Until recently, colorectal polyps were classified predominantly as hyperplastic or adenomatous. While adenomatous polyps are well-characterized precursor lesions of adenocarcinomas, hyperplastic polyps have been considered as benign lesion. However, some hyperplastic polyps with serrated morphology of the crypts have been recognized to have distinctive features and these polyps were termed 'serrated adenomas'. Recent data show that sessile serrated adenomas (SSA) might be the precursors of serrated colonic cancers, underlining the necessity of identifying them. SSA is approximately 3% of all polyps, commonly appears as flat or sessile and yellowish due to mucus production. In the pathogenesis of SSA, progression to high grade dysplasia or early invasive carcinoma may be associated with serrated neoplasia pathway different from adenoma-carcinoma sequence. We report a case with a colon polyp diagnosed as sessile serrated adenoma with high grade dysplasia after endoscopic submucosal dissection.
Adenocarcinoma
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Adenoma
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Adenomatous Polyps
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Colon
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Colonic Neoplasms
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Mucus
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Polyps