1.Commemorating Dr.Bonghak Hyun - medical doctor, humanist, and Korean war hero.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2015;58(4):271-272
No abstract available.
Korean War*
2.Special Article: Korean Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologist Past , Present and Future.
Korean Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 1999;42(2):225-230
Korean Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (KAOG) was established semicentury ago (1947). Even Korea faced a massive destrcution, political and economic crisis during Korean war, but KAOG bad developed more and more. Finally, KAOG has developed a stable association now. Now not only KAOG is a firm association domestically but also engages in an international association (e.g. AOFG, FIGO, SOINTF) and gives much contribution. Even now KAOG faces a hard-time, but I hope that KAOG will develop a prospective association in 21th century with an effort to educate many young researchers.
Hope
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Korea
;
Korean War
3.MMPI configuration of Korean War veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder.
Kyu Hyeon KIM ; Moon Yong CHUNG
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 1993;32(5):717-723
No abstract available.
Humans
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Korean War*
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MMPI*
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Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic*
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Veterans*
4.A Preliminary Anthropological Analyses of the Casualties from the Korean War during the Year 2000 -2001 Excavation.
Korean Journal of Physical Anthropology 2002;15(4):221-227
In commemoration of the 50th anniversary since the Korean War, Korean government has initiated a four -year project beginning from the year 2000 to 2003 to excavate the remains of soldier casualties from the Korean War. During the year 2000 -2001 excavation total 555 casualties (minimum number of individual; MNI) are discovered around the southern parts of Korean peninsula. On the basis of the bone remains anthropological researches including the determination of sex, the estimation of age and stature have been carried out. All casualties are determined as male mainly based on the characteristic features of the innominate bone of the pelvis. Estimation of age is gained from 313 individuals. Over 64% of the casualties were estimated between the age 20 -24 years old and almost 20% were between the age 15 -19 years old. From these data, it has been conformed that the majority of soldiers can be classified as being in a young age category Total 270 individuals are examined for estimation of statures. Approximately 68% of the findings were estimated to have been between the height 160 -170 cm in proportion, and almost 14% of findings were below 160 cm tall. Identifying the remains of casualties are carried out by uncovered belongings, taking note of eyewitness accounts, and applying scientific methods. A total of 34 individual names were identified, and among them only four soldiers have been confirmed. 27 are still in the process of verification, and the rest are nearly impossible to identify.
Anniversaries and Special Events
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Humans
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Korean War*
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Male
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Military Personnel
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Pelvis
5.Parasitic Diseases as the Cause of Death of Prisoners of War during the Korean War (1950-1953).
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2014;52(3):335-337
To determine the cause of death of prisoners of war during the Korean War (1950-1953), death certificates or medical records were analyzed. Out of 7,614 deaths, 5,013 (65.8%) were due to infectious diseases. Although dysentery and tuberculosis were the most common infectious diseases, parasitic diseases had caused 14 deaths: paragonimiasis in 5, malaria in 3, amoebiasis in 2, intestinal parasitosis in 2, ascariasis in 1, and schistosomiasis in 1. These results showed that paragonimiasis, malaria, and amoebiasis were the most fatal parasitic diseases during the early 1950s in the Korean Peninsula. Since schistosomiasis is not endemic to Korea, it is likely that the infected private soldier moved from China or Japan to Korea.
Cause of Death
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China
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Human Migration
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Humans
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Japan
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Korea
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Korean War
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Parasitic Diseases/*mortality
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Prisoners of War
6.Historical Perspectives of Korean Society for Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery: Inauguration and Activities of the Historical Records Preservation Committee
Kook Yang PARK ; Sungsoo LEE ; Byung Chul CHANG ; Tae Yun OH
The Korean Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2019;52(4):191-194
The Korean Society for Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery (KTCVS) was founded in 1968 and celebrated the 50th anniversary of its founding in 2018. The launch of the KTCVS may seem somewhat recent, given that the American Association for Thoracic Surgery was founded in 1917. However, considering the circumstances of the Korean medical community after the Japanese occupation (1910–1945), World War II (1940–1945), and the Korean War (1950–1953), this apparent delay is understandable. Even before the foundation of the KTCVS, the early pioneers of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery promptly adopted medical technologies from more advanced countries such as the United States, and contributed significantly to both cardiac and thoracic surgery despite difficult circumstances. In 2012, before the 50th anniversary of the founding of the KTCVS, members shared the opinion that objective records of the activities of the early pioneers should be identified and preserved, and reacted positively towards the necessity for historians who would preserve such records. With this background, the Historical Records Preservation Committee of the KTCVS (hereinafter, referred to as ‘the Committee’) was launched. The Committee published a white paper on the history of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery in 2015 and held an exhibition of the achievements of the pioneers at the 50th anniversary of the founding of the KTCVS. The Committee also published a book entitled “The history of Korean thoracic surgery with photographs: celebrating the 50th anniversary of the society.” The Committee will keep making efforts to find and preserve materials related to activities during the early development of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery in Korea.
Anniversaries and Special Events
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Asian Continental Ancestry Group
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Humans
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Korea
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Korean War
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Occupations
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Thoracic Surgery
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United States
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World War II
7.Lecture Note of a Thoracic Surgeon, Fifty More Years Ago.
The Korean Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2009;42(6):807-812
The late Professor Lee CB (1915~1967) was one of the pioneers in the early stages of thoracic surgery in Korea while he was in charge of the Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery at Seoul National University Hospital as the first director from 1957 until he died of liver cancer in 1967. He was a graduate from the old Seoul National University, and he dedicated himself to the field of lung surgery after he joined the army during the Korean War, which broke out in 1950. Among his many contributions to pulmonary surgery, he performed the first partial lung resection in Korea in 1953. His lecture notes were recently found. These lecture notes for medical students were written by hand in late 1950s. Considering the content and form of the lecture notes, they are thought to have very significant historical value. The lecture notes were a total of 277 pages on general thoracic surgery and cardiovascular surgery with 75 self-drawn figures. This study was intended to facilitate a better understanding of the history of thoracic surgery in Korea, and especially for young thoracic surgeons. These notes may well contribute to the field of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery in Korea.
Education, Medical
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Fees and Charges
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Hand
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Humans
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Korea
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Korean War
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Liver Neoplasms
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Lung
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Students, Medical
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Thoracic Surgery
8.Individual Identification of Human Remains from the Korean War.
Kyoung Jin SHIN ; Yun Seok YANG ; Jong Hoon CHOI ; Chong Youl KIM
Korean Journal of Legal Medicine 2001;25(2):31-37
During the exhumation of victims of Korean War, among the memorial activities of Korean War, we found a dead body in a tomb in Kyung-Ju city. With the testimony of natives we could find the family related with the body. Using bone and teeth of it we determined that it was male and about 20 years old or more and the result was unite with the insistence of the bereaved family. With the photography offered by the family and the skull we did the photographic superimposition and according to the result we could not exclude that it was the same person with him. We performed mitochondrial DNA(mtDNA) sequencing and it reveals that the dead body and the family have same maternal inherited mtDNA. Finally, We could identify the dead body. At present it is very difficult thing to collect much data of victims of Korean War because it passed over 50 years. But if we find the bereaved family of them we can identify them more accurate and more objective with the forensic identification method like sex determination, age estimation, superimposition and mtDNA sequencing and so on.
DNA, Mitochondrial
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Exhumation
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Gyeongsangbuk-do
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Humans*
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Korean War*
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Male
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Photography
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Population Groups
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Skull
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Tooth
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Young Adult
9.The Morphologic Examination and DNA Test for Sexing Using Skulls from "Keumjung-gul" Site.
Yoon Seong LEE ; Soong Deok LEE ; Young Il HWANG
Korean Journal of Legal Medicine 2000;24(2):51-56
At "Keumjung-gul" site, bones of more than 153 persons are excavated in October 1995. They were interred in Autumn of 1950 during Korean War. Among them, 70 skulls were examined in morphological method and DNA test for sex determination. With PCR amplification of amelogenin, 60 skulls were proved male, 9; female, 1; not amplified. Result with Y27H39LR, SRY and alphoid repeats were not satisfactory. The morphologic determination for sex were made maily by (1) prominence of the supercilliary arch, (2) prominence of the external occipital protuberance and crest, (3) size and shape of the mastoid process. The concurrence rate between two examiner, and between two morphologic result and DNA result were low (<70%), largely because of the subjectivity of morphologic trait and the paucity of experiences.
Amelogenin
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DNA*
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Female
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Humans
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Korean War
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Male
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Mastoid
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Polymerase Chain Reaction
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Skull*
10.Stressful Life Events and Depression in 60 Year Old Population of Gyeonggi Province : Social Support Can Act as Moderators?.
Ah Young PAIK ; Hyun YANG ; Mi Hyun PARK ; Jung Hyun NAM ; Dong Hoon OH
Journal of Korean Geriatric Psychiatry 2015;19(2):65-71
OBJECTIVE: 60-year old Korean population has particular life experiences such as Korean War. With this life experience, we aimed to examine the moderating role of social support on the relationship between adverse life events and depressive symptoms in later life. METHODS: The total respondents were 639 people who were 60-year old dwelling in Yangpyung, Gyeonggi Province, South Korea. One to one interviews were conducted by experienced research assistants. RESULTS: Examining depression, 14.7% of total population showed 15 or higher geriatric depression scale-shortform-Korea score. 70% did report stressful life events as many as 13. Also, 31.6% of total participants were isolated or at high risk of isolation. Using hierarchical multiple regression models, the results showed that social support moderated the influence of the exposure to stressful life events on depression (R2=0.124, beta=-0.118, p<0.01). The moderating effect was greater in male (R2=0.118, beta=-1.36, p<0.01) than that of female (R2=0.113, beta=-0.115, p<0.01), which is apposite to our hypothesis. CONCLUSION: This finding suggests that social support play critical roles in the stress-outcome relationship among 60-years old population like it was suggested. Since most stressful events are inevitable, it is important to build sufficient social support networks.
Surveys and Questionnaires
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Depression*
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Female
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Gyeonggi-do*
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Humans
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Korea
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Korean War
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Life Change Events
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Male