1.Differential Effects of Family Income on Self-rated Health by Age: Analysis of Seoul Citizens Health Indicators Survey 2001, 2005.
Youn JUNG ; Youngtae CHO ; Juhwan OH
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2007;40(5):381-387
OBJECTIVES: This study was conducted in order to determine how the association between socioeconomic position(SEP) and health status changes with age among Seoul residents aged 25 and over. METHODS: We utilized the 2001 and 2005 Seoul Citizens Health Indicators Surveys. We used self-rated 'poor' health status as an outcome variable, and family income as an indicator of SEP. In order to characterize the differential effects of socioeconomic position on health by age, we conducted separate multivariate analyses by 10-year age groups, controlling for sociodemographic covariates. In order to assess the relative health inequality across socioeconomic groups, we estimated the Relative Index of Inequality (RII). RESULTS: The risk of 'poor health' is significantly high in low family income groups, and this increased risk is seen at all ages. However, the magnitude of relative socioeconomic inequality in health, as measured by the odds ratio and RII, is not identical across age groups. The difference in health across income groups is small in early adulthood (ages 25-34), but increases with age until relatively late in life (ages 35-64). It then decreases among the elderly population (ages more than 65). When the RII reported in 2005 is compared to that reported in 2001, RII can be seen to have increased across all ages, with the exception of individuals aged 25-34. CONCLUSIONS: The magnitude of health inequality is the greatest during mid- to late adulthood (ages 45-64). In addition, health inequalities have worsened between 2001 and 2005 across all age groups after economic crisis.
Adult
;
Age Factors
;
*Family
;
Female
;
*Health Status
;
*Health Status Indicators
;
Humans
;
Income/*statistics & numerical data
;
Korea/epidemiology
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Socioeconomic Factors
2.Short-term Effects of Ambient Air Pollution on Emergency Department Visits for Asthma: An Assessment of Effect Modification by Prior Allergic Disease History.
Juhwan NOH ; Jungwoo SOHN ; Jaelim CHO ; Seong Kyung CHO ; Yoon Jung CHOI ; Changsoo KIM ; Dong Chun SHIN
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2016;49(5):329-341
OBJECTIVES: The goal of this study was to investigate the short-term effect of ambient air pollution on emergency department (ED) visits in Seoul for asthma according to patients’ prior history of allergic diseases. METHODS: Data on ED visits from 2005 to 2009 were obtained from the Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service. To evaluate the risk of ED visits for asthma related to ambient air pollutants (carbon monoxide [CO], nitrogen dioxide [NO₂], ozone [O₃], sulfur dioxide [SO₂], and particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter <10 μm [PM₁₀]), a generalized additive model with a Poisson distribution was used; a single-lag model and a cumulative-effect model (average concentration over the previous 1-7 days) were also explored. The percent increase and 95% confidence interval (CI) were calculated for each interquartile range (IQR) increment in the concentration of each air pollutant. Subgroup analyses were done by age, gender, the presence of allergic disease, and season. RESULTS: A total of 33 751 asthma attack cases were observed during the study period. The strongest association was a 9.6% increase (95% CI, 6.9% to 12.3%) in the risk of ED visits for asthma per IQR increase in O₃ concentration. IQR changes in NO₂ and PM₁₀ concentrations were also significantly associated with ED visits in the cumulative lag 7 model. Among patients with a prior history of allergic rhinitis or atopic dermatitis, the risk of ED visits for asthma per IQR increase in PM₁₀ concentration was higher (3.9%; 95% CI, 1.2% to 6.7%) than in patients with no such history. CONCLUSIONS: Ambient air pollutants were positively associated with ED visits for asthma, especially among subjects with a prior history of allergic rhinitis or atopic dermatitis.
Air Pollutants
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Air Pollution*
;
Asthma*
;
Dermatitis, Atopic
;
Emergencies*
;
Emergency Service, Hospital*
;
Humans
;
Insurance, Health
;
Korea
;
Nitrogen Dioxide
;
Ozone
;
Particulate Matter
;
Rhinitis, Allergic
;
Seasons
;
Seoul
;
Sulfur Dioxide
3.Ratio of Leukotriene E4 to Exhaled Nitric Oxide and the Therapeutic Response in Children With Exercise-Induced Bronchoconstriction.
Hey Sung BAEK ; Juhwan CHO ; Joo Hwa KIM ; Jae Won OH ; Ha Baik LEE
Allergy, Asthma & Immunology Research 2013;5(1):26-33
PURPOSE: This study assessed the association between the ratio of leukotriene E4 (LTE4) to fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FENO) in the response of children with exercise-induced bronchoconstriction (EIB) enrolled in a therapeutic trial with montelukast or inhaled corticosteroid (fluticasone propionate [FP]). METHODS: Children aged 6 to 18 years with EIB were randomized in a 4-week, placebo-controlled, double-blinded trial with montelukast or FP. Before and after treatment, treadmill exercise challenges were performed. The LTE4 levels in the induced sputum and urine and the FENO levels were measured in subjects before and 30 minutes after the exercise challenges. The same tests were conducted after treatment. RESULTS: A total of 24 patients completed the study: 12 in the montelukast group and 12 in FP group. Both study groups displayed a similar postexercise maximum decrease in forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) before treatment as well as after treatment. However, there were significant differences in the magnitude of change between the two (Delta; -18.38+/-14.53% vs. -4.67+/-8.12% for the montelukast and FP groups, respectively; P=0.021). The Delta logarithmic sputum baseline and postexercise LTE4/FENO ratio were significantly lower in the montelukast group than in the FP group (baseline; -0.09+/-0.21 vs. -0.024+/-0.03, P=0.045; postexercise, -0.61+/-0.33 vs. -0.11+/-0.28, P=0.023). CONCLUSIONS: These data indicate that the efficacy of montelukast for preventing a maximum decrease in FEV1 after exercise is significantly higher than that of FP, and the high LTE4/FENO ratio is associated with a greater response to montelukast than to FP for EIB therapy. These results suggest that LTE4 may play an important role in EIB.
Acetates
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Aged
;
Bronchoconstriction
;
Child
;
Diethylpropion
;
Forced Expiratory Volume
;
Humans
;
Leukotriene E4
;
Nitric Oxide
;
Quinolines
;
Sputum
4.The unrealized potential: cohort effects and age-period-cohort analysis
Jongho HEO ; Sun Young JEON ; Chang Mo OH ; Jongnam HWANG ; Juhwan OH ; Youngtae CHO
Epidemiology and Health 2017;39(1):2017056-
This study aims to provide a systematical introduction of age-period-cohort (APC) analysis to South Korean readers who are unfamiliar with this method (we provide an extended version of this study in Korean). As health data in South Korea has substantially accumulated, population-level studies that explore long-term trends of health status and health inequalities and identify macrosocial determinants of the trends are needed. Analyzing long-term trends requires to discern independent effects of age, period, and cohort using APC analysis. Most existing health and aging literature have used cross-sectional or short-term available panel data to identify age or period effects ignoring cohort effects. This under-use of APC analysis may be attributed to the identification (ID) problem caused by the perfect linear dependency across age, period, and cohort. This study explores recently developed three APC models to address the ID problem and adequately estimate the effects of A-P-C: intrinsic estimator-APC models for tabular age by period data; hierarchical cross-classified random effects models for repeated cross-sectional data; and hierarchical APC-growth curve models for accelerated longitudinal panel data. An analytic exemplar for each model was provided. APC analysis may contribute to identifying biological, historical, and socioeconomic determinants in long-term trends of health status and health inequalities as well as examining Korean's aging trajectories and temporal trends of period and cohort effects. For designing effective health policies that improve Korean population's health and reduce health inequalities, it is essential to understand independent effects of the three temporal factors by using the innovative APC models.
Aging
;
Cohort Effect
;
Cohort Studies
;
Health Policy
;
Korea
;
Methods
;
Socioeconomic Factors
5.The unrealized potential: cohort effects and age-period-cohort analysis.
Jongho HEO ; Sun Young JEON ; Chang Mo OH ; Jongnam HWANG ; Juhwan OH ; Youngtae CHO
Epidemiology and Health 2017;39(1):e2017056-
This study aims to provide a systematical introduction of age-period-cohort (APC) analysis to South Korean readers who are unfamiliar with this method (we provide an extended version of this study in Korean). As health data in South Korea has substantially accumulated, population-level studies that explore long-term trends of health status and health inequalities and identify macrosocial determinants of the trends are needed. Analyzing long-term trends requires to discern independent effects of age, period, and cohort using APC analysis. Most existing health and aging literature have used cross-sectional or short-term available panel data to identify age or period effects ignoring cohort effects. This under-use of APC analysis may be attributed to the identification (ID) problem caused by the perfect linear dependency across age, period, and cohort. This study explores recently developed three APC models to address the ID problem and adequately estimate the effects of A-P-C: intrinsic estimator-APC models for tabular age by period data; hierarchical cross-classified random effects models for repeated cross-sectional data; and hierarchical APC-growth curve models for accelerated longitudinal panel data. An analytic exemplar for each model was provided. APC analysis may contribute to identifying biological, historical, and socioeconomic determinants in long-term trends of health status and health inequalities as well as examining Korean's aging trajectories and temporal trends of period and cohort effects. For designing effective health policies that improve Korean population's health and reduce health inequalities, it is essential to understand independent effects of the three temporal factors by using the innovative APC models.
Aging
;
Cohort Effect*
;
Cohort Studies*
;
Health Policy
;
Korea
;
Methods
;
Socioeconomic Factors
6.Effect of Socioeconomic Status and Underlying Disease on the Association between Ambient Temperature and Ischemic Stroke.
Seong Kyung CHO ; Jungwoo SOHN ; Jaelim CHO ; Juhwan NOH ; Kyoung Hwa HA ; Yoon Jung CHOI ; Sangjoon PAE ; Changsoo KIM ; Dong Chun SHIN
Yonsei Medical Journal 2018;59(5):686-692
PURPOSE: Inconsistent findings have been reported regarding the effect of ambient temperature on ischemic stroke. Furthermore, little is known about how underlying disease and low socioeconomic status influence the association. We, therefore, investigated the relationship between ambient temperature and emergency department (ED) visits for ischemic stroke, and aimed to identify susceptible populations. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Using medical claims data, we identified ED visits for ischemic stroke during 2005–2009 in Seoul, Korea. We conducted piecewise linear regression analyses to find optimum ambient temperature thresholds in summer and winter, and estimated the relative risks (RR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) per a 1℃ increase in temperature above/below the thresholds, adjusting for relative humidity, holidays, day of the week, and air pollutant levels. RESULTS: There were 63564 ED visits for ischemic stroke. In summer, the risk of ED visits for ischemic stroke was not significant, with the threshold at 26.8℃. However, the RRs were 1.055 (95% CI, 1.006–1.106) above 25.0℃ in medical aid beneficiaries and 1.044 (1.007–1.082) above 25.8℃ in patients with diabetes. In winter, the risk of ED visits for ischemic stroke significantly increased as the temperature decreased above the threshold at 7.2℃. This inverse association was significant also in patients with hypertension and diabetes mellitus above threshold temperatures. CONCLUSION: Ambient temperature increases above a threshold were positively associated with ED visits for ischemic stroke in patients with diabetes and medical aid beneficiaries in summer. In winter, temperature, to a point, and ischemic stroke visits were inversely associated.
Cardiovascular Diseases
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Diabetes Mellitus
;
Emergency Service, Hospital
;
Holidays
;
Humans
;
Humidity
;
Hypertension
;
Korea
;
Linear Models
;
Seoul
;
Social Class*
;
Stroke*
7.Residential radon and environmental burden of disease among Non-smokers.
Juhwan NOH ; Jungwoo SOHN ; Jaelim CHO ; Dae Ryong KANG ; Sowon JOO ; Changsoo KIM ; Dong Chun SHIN
Annals of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2016;28(1):12-
BACKGROUND: Lung cancer was the second highest absolute cancer incidence globally and the first cause of cancer mortality in 2014. Indoor radon is the second leading risk factor of lung cancer after cigarette smoking among ever smokers and the first among non-smokers. Environmental burden of disease (EBD) attributable to residential radon among non-smokers is critical for identifying threats to population health and planning health policy. METHODS: To identify and retrieve literatures describing environmental burden of lung cancer attributable to residential radon, we searched databases including Ovid-MEDLINE, -EMBASE from 1980 to 2016. Search terms included patient keywords using ‘lung’, ‘neoplasm’, exposure keywords using ‘residential’, ‘radon’, and outcomes keywords using ‘years of life lost’, ‘years of life lost due to disability’, ‘burden’. Searching through literatures identified 261 documents; further 9 documents were identified using manual searching. Two researchers independently assessed 271 abstracts eligible for inclusion at the abstract level. Full text reviews were conducted for selected publications after the first assessment. Ten studies were included in the final evaluation. REVIEW: Global disability‐adjusted life years (DALYs)(95 % uncertainty interval) for lung cancer were increased by 35.9 % from 23,850,000(18,835,000-29,845,000) in 1900 to 32,405,000(24,400,000-38,334,000) in 2000. DALYs attributable to residential radon were 2,114,000(273,000-4,660,000) DALYs in 2010. Lung cancer caused 34,732,900(33,042,600 ~ 36,328,100) DALYs in 2013. DALYs attributable to residential radon were 1,979,000(1,331,000-2,768,000) DALYs for in 2013. The number of attributable lung cancer cases was 70-900 and EBD for radon was 1,000-14,000 DALYs in Netherland. The years of life lost were 0.066 years among never-smokers and 0.198 years among ever-smoker population in Canada. CONCLUSION: In summary, estimated global EBD attributable to residential radon was 1,979,000 DALYs for both sexes in 2013. In Netherlands, EBD for radon was 1,000–14,000 DALYs. Smoking population lost three times more years than never-smokers in Canada. There was no study estimating EBD of residential radon among never smokers in Korea and Asian country. In addition, there were a few studies reflecting the age of building, though residential radon exposure level depends on the age of building. Further EBD study reflecting Korean disability weight and the age of building is required to estimate EBD precisely. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s40557-016-0092-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
;
Canada
;
Health Policy
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Korea
;
Lung Neoplasms
;
Mortality
;
Netherlands
;
Radon*
;
Risk Factors
;
Smoke
;
Smoking
;
Uncertainty
8.Study Design for the 2016 Baseline Survey of a Health System Strengthening Project in Quoc Oai District, Hanoi, Vietnam
Van Minh HOANG ; Juhwan OH ; Bao Ngoc NGUYEN ; Le Minh DAT ; Jong Koo LEE ; Thi Giang Huong TRAN ; Van Huy NGUYEN ; Seung Pyo LEE ; Kyung Sook BANG ; Youngtae CHO ; Sun Young KIM ; Hwa Young LEE ; Quang Cuong LE ; Narshil CHOI ; Thai Son DINH ; Ngoc Hoat LUU
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2019;34(5):e42-
BACKGROUND: In order to provide essential scientific evidence on the population's health status and social health determinants as well as the current capacity of the health care system in Vietnam to health policy makers and managers, Vietnam Ministry of Health, Hanoi University of Public Health, Hanoi Medical University, and Ho Chi Minh University of Medicine and Pharmacy collaborated with Seoul National University (Korea) and conducted a health system survey in the Quoc Oai district (of Hanoi capital) that represented northern rural Vietnam. METHODS: The study design was a cross-sectional study. The survey covered different topics (more than 200 questions) and was administered in three separate questionnaires: 1) Basic information of all household members; 2) Household characteristics; and 3) Individual characteristics. Socio-demographic characteristics among the households and individuals were collected from 2,400 households sampled by multi-stage cluster sampling method: more than 200 questions. RESULTS: The household size of Quoc Oai was larger than the national average and there was no significant difference in gender composition. In addition, the proportions of pre-elderly, age 55–64, and elderly group (65 years old and over) were higher than the national population statistics. In this context, demographic transition has begun in Quoc Oai. CONCLUSION: This study design description provides the basic information about a baseline survey of a future prospective cohort (as a part of a collaborative project on strengthening the health system in Vietnam) to the prospective data user of this survey.
Aged
;
Cohort Studies
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Delivery of Health Care
;
Family Characteristics
;
Health Policy
;
Humans
;
Methods
;
Pharmacy
;
Population Characteristics
;
Population Dynamics
;
Prospective Studies
;
Public Health
;
Seoul
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Vietnam
9.SYNCRIP controls miR-137 and striatal learning in animal models of methamphetamine abstinence.
Baeksun KIM ; Sung Hyun TAG ; Eunjoo NAM ; Suji HAM ; Sujin AHN ; Juhwan KIM ; Doo-Wan CHO ; Sangjoon LEE ; Young-Su YANG ; Seung Eun LEE ; Yong Sik KIM ; Il-Joo CHO ; Kwang Pyo KIM ; Su-Cheol HAN ; Heh-In IM
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B 2022;12(8):3281-3297
Abstinence from prolonged psychostimulant use prompts stimulant withdrawal syndrome. Molecular adaptations within the dorsal striatum have been considered the main hallmark of stimulant abstinence. Here we explored striatal miRNA-target interaction and its impact on circulating miRNA marker as well as behavioral dysfunctions in methamphetamine (MA) abstinence. We conducted miRNA sequencing and profiling in the nonhuman primate model of MA abstinence, followed by miRNA qPCR, LC-MS/MS proteomics, immunoassays, and behavior tests in mice. In nonhuman primates, MA abstinence triggered a lasting upregulation of miR-137 in the dorsal striatum but a simultaneous downregulation of circulating miR-137. In mice, aberrant increase in striatal miR-137-dependent inhibition of SYNCRIP essentially mediated the MA abstinence-induced reduction of circulating miR-137. Pathway modeling through experimental deduction illustrated that the MA abstinence-mediated downregulation of circulating miR-137 was caused by reduction of SYNCRIP-dependent miRNA sorting into the exosomes in the dorsal striatum. Furthermore, diminished SYNCRIP in the dorsal striatum was necessary for MA abstinence-induced behavioral bias towards egocentric spatial learning. Taken together, our data revealed circulating miR-137 as a potential blood-based marker that could reflect MA abstinence-dependent changes in striatal miR-137/SYNCRIP axis, and striatal SYNCRIP as a potential therapeutic target for striatum-associated cognitive dysfunction by MA withdrawal syndrome.