1.Effects of Resilience and Job Satisfaction on Organizational Commitment in Korean-American Registered Nurses.
Kum Sook SEO ; Miyoung KIM ; Jinhwa PARK
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administration 2014;20(1):48-58
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of resilience and job satisfaction on organizational commitment in Korean-American registered nurses. METHODS: A cross-sectional study was conducted using a structured questionnaire survey with 203 Korean-American registered nurses living in New York State and New Jersey State. Data were collected from May 8 to August 25, 2012. Collected data were analyzed using t-test, ANOVA, Scheffe test and hierarchical multiple regression. RESULTS: The mean organizational commitment of Korean-American registered nurses was 3.34+/-0.59 out of a possible 5.00. The resilience and job satisfaction were significant variables predicting the level of organizational commitment among Korean-American registered nurses, accounting for 50% of the variability. CONCLUSION: The results of the study indicate that it is necessary to identify factors influencing job satisfaction and develop programs to strengthen personal resilience in order to increase organizational commitment.
Cross-Sectional Studies
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Humans
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Job Satisfaction*
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New Jersey
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Surveys and Questionnaires
2.Nurses' Experience of Managing Diet and Fluid in Hemodialysis Patients.
Korean Journal of Rehabilitation Nursing 2014;17(1):27-37
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to understand nurses' experience of managing diet and fluid in hemodialysis patients and to provide helpful information in improving care of hemodialysis patients. METHODS: Data were collected through in-depth interviews with ten nurses who had experience of providing care to hemodialysis patients. Colazzi's phenomenological method was used to analyze data. RESULTS: Twenty themes were identified in the first stage of data analysis and were later categorized into ten theme clusters, of which four categories were derived. The four categories were 'developing a strong feeling of responsibility for management', 'acknowledging limits in performing duties', 'providing patient-centered education' and 'becoming a guide for the long treatment process'. CONCLUSION: The study results will be useful for improving nursing curriculum to ensure more effective and successful diet and fluid management in hemodialysis patients.
Curriculum
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Diet*
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Hemodiafiltration
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Humans
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Nursing
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Qualitative Research
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Renal Dialysis*
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Statistics as Topic
3.Abnormalities of Liver Function during Total Parenteral Nutrition (TPN): Alteration of Serum Liver Enzyme during Short-term TPN.
Tae Hyun KIM ; Kyung Hyun CHOI ; Ki Young YOON ; Kyung Won SEO ; Dae Woo YOO ; Won Geun KANG ; Dong Won RYU ; Kyoung Chun LEE ; Eun Ae JUNG ; Sun Gye LIM ; Hong Seon KIM ; Kum Sook LEE ; Eun Sil KIM ; Su Mi AHN
Journal of the Korean Surgical Society 2002;63(5):409-415
PURPOSE: TPN has been widely used to treat nutritional depletion since the late 1960s. However, many metabolic complications may occur as a result of parenteral feeding. Among these, hepatic complications has received increasing attention. A retrospective review of liver function abnormalities in adult patients who underwent TPN was done to determine the frequency and magnitude of the abnormalities in a liver function test. METHODS: From January 2001 to Jun 2001, 160 adult patient receiving TPN were reviewed. Of these, 111 had a malignant disease and 49 had a benign disease. The duration of TPN therapy ranged from 5 days to 52 days, with a mean duration of 14 days. Abnormalities of liver function test were defined as a value greater than the upper normal limit. Forty cases of gastric cancer were analyzed to determine the risk factors that contribute to abnormal liver function in individual patients receiving TPN. RESULTS: Abnormalities of the liver function test appeared after 6~7 days of therapy. Increases in the ALP levels were noted in 34 out of 93 patients (37.6%), in the AST levels in 42 out of 116 patients (36.2%), in the ALT levels in 54 out of 125 patients (43.2%), in the LDH levels in 20 out of 72 patients (27.8%), in the gamma-GTP levels in 44 out of 81 patients (54.3%), and in the bilirubin levels in 30 out of 126 patients (23.8%). The serum ALP level rose to 1.6 times upper the limit of normal; AST, 1.7 times; ALT, 2.0 times; LDH, 1.2 times; gamma-GTP, 2.4 times; bilirubin, 2.4 times. gamma-GTP value was most sensitive. In 40 gastric cancers, factors as age, the amount of TPN solution, the duration of TPN, intraoperative chemotherapy, transfusion, and postoperative infection were investigated. However, no association with TPN-associated liver function abnormalities was found. CONCLUSION: The incidences of an abnormal liver function during TPN were 23.8~54.3%. However, the liver function abnormalities that developed during short term-TPN were reversible and not serious.
Adult
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Bilirubin
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Drug Therapy
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Humans
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Incidence
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Liver Function Tests
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Liver*
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Parenteral Nutrition
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Parenteral Nutrition, Total*
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Retrospective Studies
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Risk Factors
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Stomach Neoplasms
4.Distortion of the Dose Profile in a Three-dimensional Moving Phantom to Simulate Tumor Motion during Image-guided Radiosurgery.
Mi Sook KIM ; Seonghwan HA ; Dong Han LEE ; Young Hoon JI ; Seong Yul YOO ; Chul Koo CHO ; Kwang Mo YANG ; Hyung Jun YOO ; Young Seok SEO ; Chan Il PARK ; Il Han KIM ; Seong Jun YE ; Jae Hong PARK ; Kum Bae KIM
The Journal of the Korean Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology 2007;25(4):268-277
PURPOSE: Respiratory motion is a considerable inhibiting factor for precise treatment with stereotactic radiosurgery using the CyberKnife (CK). In this study, we developed a moving phantom to simulate three-dimensional breathing movement and investigated the distortion of dose profiles between the use of a moving phantom and a static phantom. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The phantom consisted of four pieces of polyethylene; two sheets of Gafchromic film were inserted for dosimetry. Treatment was planned to deliver 30 Gy to virtual tumors of 20, 30, 40, and 50 mm diameters using 104 beams and a single center mode. A specially designed robot produced three-dimensional motion in the right-left, anterior-posterior, and craniocaudal directions of 5, 10 and 20 mm, respectively. Using the optical density of the films as a function of dose, the dose profiles of both static and moving phantoms were measured. RESULTS: The prescribed isodose to cover the virtual tumors on the static phantom were 80% for 20 mm, 84% for 30 mm, 83% for 40 mm and 80% for 50 mm tumors. However, to compensate for the respiratory motion, the minimum isodose levels to cover the moving target were 70% for the 30~50 mm diameter tumors and 60% for a 20 mm tumor. For the 20 mm tumor, the gaps between the isodose curves for the static and moving phantoms were 3.2, 3.3, 3.5 and 1.1 mm for the cranial, caudal, right, and left direction, respectively. In the case of the 30 mm tumor, the gaps were 3.9, 4.2, 2.8, 0 mm, respectively. In the case of the 40 mm tumor, the gaps were 4.0, 4.8, 1.1, and 0 mm, respectively. In the case of the 50 mm diameter tumor, the gaps were 3.9, 3.9, 0 and 0 mm, respectively. CONCLUSION: For a tumor of a 20 mm diameter, the 80% isodose curve can be planned to cover the tumor; a 60% isodose curve will have to be chosen due to the tumor motion. The gap between these 80% and 60% curves is 5 mm. In tumors with diameters of 30, 40 and 50 mm, the whole tumor will be covered if an isodose curve of about 70% is selected, equivalent of placing a respiratory margin of below 5 mm. It was confirmed that during CK treatment for a moving tumor, the range of distortion produced by motion was less than the range of motion itself.
Polyethylene
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Radiosurgery*
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Range of Motion, Articular
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Respiration
5.Relationship between the Glutathione-S-Transferase P1, M1, and T1 Genotypes and Prostate Cancer Risk in Korean Subjects.
Dong Deuk KWON ; Jea Whan LEE ; Dong Youp HAN ; Il Young SEO ; Seung Chel PARK ; Hee Jong JEONG ; Yun Sik YANG ; Soo Cheon CHAE ; Kyung Sook NA ; Kum Ja MO ; Joung Joong KIM ; Joung Sik RIM
Korean Journal of Urology 2011;52(4):247-252
PURPOSE: The glutathione-S-transferase (GST)P1, GSTM1, and GSTT1 genotypes have been associated with an increased risk of prostate, bladder, and lung cancers. The aim of this study was to investigate the association between the GSTP1, GSTM1, and GSTT1 genotypes and the risk of prostate cancer in Korean men. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study group consisted of 166 patients with histologically confirmed prostate cancer. The control group consisted of 327 healthy, cancer-free individuals. The diagnosis of prostate cancer was made by transrectal ultrasound-guided biopsy. Patients with prostatic adenocarcinoma were divided into organ-confined (< or =pT2) and non-organ-confined (> or =pT3) subgroups. The histological grades were subdivided according to the Gleason score. The GSTP1, GSTM1, and GSTT1 genotypes were determined by using polymerase chain reaction-based methods. The relationship among GSTP1, GSTM1, and GSTT1 polymorphisms and prostate cancer in a case-control study was investigated. RESULTS: The frequency of the GSTM1 null genotype in the prostate cancer group (54.2%) was higher than in the control group (odds ratio=1.53, 95% confidence interval=1.20-1.96). The comparison of the GSTP1, GSTM1, and GSTT1 genotypes and cancer prognostic factors, such as staging and grading, showed no statistical significance. CONCLUSIONS: An increased risk for prostate cancer may be associated with the GSTM1 null genotype in Korean men, but no association was found with the GSTT1 or GSTP1 genotypes.
Adenocarcinoma
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Biopsy
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Case-Control Studies
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Genotype
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Glutathione Transferase
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Humans
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Lung Neoplasms
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Male
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Neoplasm Grading
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Prostate
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Prostatic Neoplasms
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Urinary Bladder
6.Outcomes of stereotactic body radiotherapy for unresectable primary or recurrent cholangiocarcinoma.
Da Hoon JUNG ; Mi Sook KIM ; Chul Koo CHO ; Hyung Jun YOO ; Won Il JANG ; Young Seok SEO ; Eun Kyung PAIK ; Kum Bae KIM ; Chul Ju HAN ; Sang Bum KIM
Radiation Oncology Journal 2014;32(3):163-169
PURPOSE: To report the results of stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) for unresectable primary or recurrent cholangiocarcinoma. MATERIALS AND METHODS: From January 2005 through August 2013, 58 patients with unresectable primary (n = 28) or recurrent (n = 30) cholangiocarcinoma treated by SBRT were retrospectively analyzed. The median prescribed dose was 45 Gy in 3 fractions (range, 15 to 60 Gy in 1-5 fractions). Patients were treated by SBRT only (n = 53) or EBRT + SBRT boost (n = 5). The median tumor volume was 40 mL (range, 5 to 1,287 mL). RESULTS: The median follow-up duration was 10 months (range, 1 to 97 months). The 1-year, 2-year overall survival rates, and median survival were 45%, 20%, and 10 months, respectively. The median survival for primary group and recurrent group were 5 and 13 months, respectively. Local control rate at 1-year and 2-year were 85% and 72%, respectively. Disease progression-free survival rates at 1-year and 2-year were 26% and 23%, respectively. In univariate analysis, ECOG performance score (0-1 vs. 2-3), treatment volume (<50 vs. > or =50 mL), and pre-SBRT CEA level (<5 vs. > or =5 ng/mL) were significant in overall survival rate. In multivariate analysis, ECOG score (p = 0.037) and tumor volume (p = 0.030) were statistically significant. In the recurrent tumor group, patients with >12 months interval from surgery to recurrence showed statistically significant higher overall survival rate than those with < or =12 months (p = 0.026). Six patients (10%) experienced > or =grade 3 complications. CONCLUSION: SBRT can be considered as an effective local modality for unresectable primary or recurrent cholangiocarcinoma.
Cholangiocarcinoma*
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Disease-Free Survival
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Follow-Up Studies
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Humans
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Multivariate Analysis
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Radiosurgery*
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Recurrence
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Retrospective Studies
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Survival Rate
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Tumor Burden