1.Toward Further Progress of the Korean Neuropsychiatric Association Affiliated Academic Societies.
Chan Hyung KIM ; Yang Whan JEON ; Jae Jin KIM ; Jun Soo KWON
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 2005;44(4):420-424
Recently, the Korean Neuropsychiatric Association (KCNP) has been expanded greatly in the number of members as well as the qualities in the area of practice and research. There are also 23 affiliated academic societies : Korean Academy of Psychotherapists, Korean Society for Analytical Psychology, the Korean Psychoanalytic Society, the Korean Association for Clinical Art, Korean Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, the Korean Association of Social Psychiatry, The Korean Society of Biological Therapies in Psychiatry, Korean College of Neuropsychopharmacology, the Korean Society of Biological Psychiatry, Society of Korean Women Psychiatrists, the Korean Society of Clinical Hypnosis, the Society for Human Sexuality, Korean Society of Sleep Research, the Korean Society for Psychopathology and Psychiatric Classification, Korean Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, Korean Psychosomatic Society, Korean Academy of Sleep Medicine, Korean Association for Geriatic Psychiatry, Korean Academy of Psychiatrists in Alcoholism & Addiction, Korean Academy of Adolescent Psychiatry, Korean Academy Schizophrenia, Korean Society for Depressive and Bipolar Disorders, and Korean Academy of Anxiety Disorders. To further encourage the progress of the KCNP affiliated academic societies, the KCNP planning committee has developed the proposed criteria for assessing the societies.
Adolescent
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Adolescent Psychiatry
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Alcoholism
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Anxiety Disorders
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Biological Psychiatry
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Biological Therapy
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Bipolar Disorder
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Child
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Classification
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Community Psychiatry
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Female
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Humans
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Hypnosis
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Jurisprudence
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Psychiatry
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Psychology
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Psychopathology
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Schizophrenia
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Sexuality
2.An Analysis of In-Training Examination for the Psychiatric Residents in Korea: Five-year Cumulative Results.
Ung Gu KANG ; Min Seong KOO ; Ho Suk SUH ; Bo Hyun YOON ; Kyoung Uk LEE ; Duk In JON ; Sung Hoon JEONG ; Seong Hoon JEONG ; Han Yong JUNG ; Jong Huk CHOI ; Tae Hyon HA ; In Won CHUNG
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 2009;48(5):359-367
OBJECTIVES: The in-training examination (Performance Examination, PE) for psychiatric residents in Korea was launched 5 years ago by the Korean Neuropsychiatric Association (KNPA). This article analyzes 5-year accumulated data on the PE, and tries to make some suggestions for further development of the PE. METHODS: The 5-year data, previously utilized for the generation of formal annual reports were reanalyzed, with an emphasis on longitudinal trends. RESULTS: The analyses indicated the following; 1) Higher-year residents earned definitely higher scores than their lower-year colleagues on the PE. This trend was especially prominent in the area of psychopharmacology-biological psychiatry, geriatric psychiatry, child and adolescent psychiatry, and the emergency-organic psychiatry. There was no year-related performance difference in the area of psychoses. 2) In the area of anxiety-somatization disorder, psychophysiological disorder, and geriatric psychiatry, the residents in the university-affiliated hospitals outperformed those in the specialized psychiatric hospitals. 3) Through analyzing multiple-times examinees, it was found that their first-and second-time performances were moderately correlated, and that their ranks tended to improve, demonstrating a continuously improving performance according to the training year. CONCLUSION: These result suggested that the KNPA PE is a feasible measure for the estimation of an individual resident's performance as well as the adequacy of the environment provided by the training institutes.
Academies and Institutes
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Adolescent
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Adolescent Psychiatry
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Child
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Child Psychiatry
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Geriatric Psychiatry
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Hospitals, Psychiatric
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Humans
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Korea
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Psychophysiologic Disorders
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Psychotic Disorders
3.Psycho-spiritual paradigm in caring for the critically and terminally ill
The Philippine Journal of Psychiatry 1999;23(1):11-13
The renewed emphasis on dynamic psychiatry is a countervailing response to the giant leaps in Biologic Psychiatry in the last 2-3 decades. The psychiatrist is uniquely endowed with his medical background and psychological orientation to travel through the bio-psycho-spiritual interface of human existence and accompany the critically and terminally ill.
PSYCHIATRY
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BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY
4.Professor Edmond Chiu and Korean Geriatric Psychiatry.
Journal of Korean Geriatric Psychiatry 2003;7(2):105-107
No abstract available.
Geriatric Psychiatry*
5.Ten Years' Reminiscence of the Korean Association for Geriatric Psychiatry.
Journal of Korean Geriatric Psychiatry 2004;8(1):11-14
No abstract available.
Geriatric Psychiatry*
6.Geriatric psychiatry in the Philippines
The Philippine Journal of Psychiatry 1999;23(2):33-
Geriatric psychiatry as a subspecialty is relatively new in our country. However, for a long time, psychiatrists in the Philippines have been treating elderly psychiatric patients.
GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY
7.Social psychiatry and the changing world
The Philippine Journal of Psychiatry 1999;23(2):12-17
Social changes known to be prevalent in the world today, especially those identified in developing countries also prevail in the Philippines. These social transformations have had an impact on individuals and communities. What has become clear is that the political and social forces that have generated such changes have contributed significantly to an increase in the world-wide incidence of psychosocial and mental health problems.
PSYCHIATRY
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COMMUNITY PSYCHIATRY
8.Attitudes of Psychiatrists towards Smartphone Usage of Children and Adolescents.
Yeon Jung LEE ; Soyoung Irene LEE ; A Reum LEE ; Geon Ho BAHN ; Tae Young CHOI ; Ji Youn KIM ; Ji Hoon KIM ; Eun Jin PARK ; June Sung PARK ; Soo Young BHANG ; Moon Soo LEE ; So Hee LEE ; Sangcheol CHOI
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 2015;54(4):556-563
OBJECTIVES: In this study, we performed a preliminary investigation for establishing guidelines for the usage of smartphones in children and adolescents. METHODS: From March 2014 to August 2014, 182 board-certified psychiatrists were asked to participate in the survey ; 121 participants completed the questionnaire. The questionnaire was developed by the authors, mainly the Public Relations Committee of the Korean Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. It evaluates psychiatrists' opinions on the use of smartphones in children and adolescents. In addition, psychiatrists' attitudes towards their own usage of smartphones were assessed in order to determine the impact on their opinion towards the children's usage. RESULTS: Psychiatrists have recommended various opinions as the appropriate age to own a smartphone for the first time. Mean age recommended by psychiatrists is grade 7.7. One-hundred participants (82.6%) agreed to the age limit to own a smartphone for the first time. In addition all participants agreed to the necessity of a time limit in children and adolescents. Psychiatrists (17.4%) who disagree on the age limit in children considered the smartphone more useful by themselves compared to psychiatrists who agreed on the age limit. CONCLUSION: Most psychiatrists have recommended that an appropriate limit for smartphone usage in children and adolescents is needed.
Adolescent Psychiatry
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Adolescent*
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Cellular Phone
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Child*
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Humans
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Psychiatry*
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Public Relations
9.Mental Illnesses: Disease of Mind?.
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 2002;41(1):7-11
Freud once emphasized the importance of both temperamental and environmental factors as the cause of mental illness while he discussed about 'the Nature and the Nurture'. And because of the limitation to discover the nature of the constitutional factor, he said, he focused on the environmental factor as the way through which we better approch to treat patients. As a psychoanalyst originally from neurological background, he though believed that there should be 'the biological bedrock' in every psychological phenominon. And one good example is that 'ego' comes from 'body ego'. Before and after him, in the history of psychiatry, the most popular idea is that body(brain) and mind are inseparable. During the past half century, there has been remarkable progress in the biological psychiatry field, which gives us a great opportunity to investigate the relationship between body and mind more in detail. So many biological psychiatrists suggest hypothetical theories to define the cause and the nature of mental illness. Some of them(like E Kendal) even darely propose the explanation of the psychological phenomena in biological terms. However, as Freud once hinted, we may never explain the nature of mental phenomena as a whole since there always will remain what we may never know no matter how hardly we try to know. It is because that is exactly the very nature of 'the unconsciousness' that is the most mystical part of brain.
Biological Psychiatry
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Brain
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Humans
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Psychiatry
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Temperament
10.The Evolution of Caregiving and Attachment.
Journal of the Korean Society of Biological Psychiatry 2017;24(3):83-94
Caregiving for the children seems to be one of the most challenging tasks for the parents who should devote themselves totally despite endangering them. From the evolutionary perspective, this human behavior must have been the advantage in the survival of the species and rooted in ethological origin. John Bowlby, a child psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, and great developmental researcher, had formulated the attachment theory linking psychoanalysis and ethology through evolutionary biology. His and later following researchers' outcomes have provided enormous influence on viewing parental caregiving and the insight of human relationships and interventions. This article overviews the attachment theory in terms of the goal oriented cybernetic system to gain the survival advantage of the offspring and investigates the evolutionary origin of the caregiving and attachment from the retiles of the Mesozoic era to the mammalian revolution and finally to the human being. Deeper understanding of the nurturance and adult relationships from the standpoint of evolution can provide clinical utility of awareness of clients' lives.
Adult
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Biology
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Child
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Cybernetics
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Ethology
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Humans
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Parents
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Psychiatry
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Psychoanalysis