1.Erratum Announcement: Ecological Factors Affecting School Adjustment of Low-Income Adolescents Attending Community Child Care Center (Child Health Nursing Research Vol. 23 No. 2. p. 158~167).
Jiyoung PARK ; Youngsook PARK ; Jeongeun LEE ; Soobin KIM
Child Health Nursing Research 2017;23(3):405-405
The author's affiliation should be corrected.
2.Ecological Factors Affecting School Adjustment of Low-Income Adolescents Attending Community Child Care Center.
Jiyoung PARK ; Youngsook PARK ; Jeongeun LEE ; Soobin KIM
Child Health Nursing Research 2017;23(2):158-167
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to investigate the ecological factors influencing school adjustment of adolescents from low-income families. METHODS: Secondary data analysis was performed using data of 1,321 low-income adolescents in 123 regions found on the Survey on Service Satisfaction with Community Child Care Center. RESULTS: The results of multi-level analysis identified the factors influencing school adjustment of low-income adolescents as follows: individual-level factors were gender, grade in school, and emotional problem; an interpersonal-level factor was family structure; organizational-level factors were length of time attending center and satisfaction with the service of the center; community-level factors were region and perception of community. CONCLUSION: The results suggest that low-income adolescents' adjustment to school is influenced not only by individual factors but also by diverse environmental factors. Community factors suggest that more education support systems and leisure facilities for adolescents need to be built in small and medium cities. Strategies to enhance positive perception of community are also needed for this population. Further, it is necessary to develop multi-level interventions to improve the school adjustment of adolescents from vulnerable social groups.
Adolescent*
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Child
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Child Care*
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Child*
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Community-Based Participatory Research
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Education
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Humans
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Leisure Activities
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Multilevel Analysis
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Poverty
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Social Adjustment
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Statistics as Topic
3.Frequency of and Reasons for Unplanned Transfers From the Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility in a Tertiary Hospital
Soobin IM ; Da Young LIM ; Min Kyun SOHN ; Yeongwook KIM
Annals of Rehabilitation Medicine 2020;44(2):151-157
Objective:
To characterize the patients in the inpatient rehabilitation facility who were transferred to acute care facilities and identify the frequency of and reasons for the unplanned transfer.
Methods:
Medical records of patients admitted to the inpatient rehabilitation facility from October 2017 to December 2018 were reviewed. Patients were categorized according to their diagnoses. The included patients were divided into the unplanned transfer and control groups based on whether they required to transfer to another department for acute care before completing an uninterrupted rehabilitation course. The groups were compared in terms of sex, age, length of stay, admission sources, and disease groups. The reasons for unplanned transfers were classified based on medical or surgical conditions.
Results:
Of the 1,378 patients were admitted to the inpatient rehabilitation facility, 1,301 satisfied inclusion criteria. Among them, 121 (9.3%) were unexpectedly transferred to the medical or surgical department. The unplanned transfer group had a higher age (69.54±12.53 vs. 64.39±15.32 years; p=0.001) and longer length of stay (85.69±66.08 vs. 37.81±31.13 days; p<0.001) than the control group. The top 3 reasons for unplanned transfers were infectious disease, cardiopulmonary disease, and orthopedic problem.
Conclusion
The unplanned transfer group had a significantly higher age and longer length of stay. The most common reason for the unplanned transfer was infectious disease. However, the proportions of those with orthopedic and neurological problems were relatively high. Therefore, further studies of these patient populations may help organize systematic strategies that are needed to reduce unplanned transfers to acute facilities for patients in rehabilitation facilities.
4.Two Previously Unrecorded Fungal Species Isolated from Muui Island in Korea
Soobin SHIN ; Hosung JEON ; Sieun KIM ; Hyun-Ju NOH ; Jong Won JO ; Kyunghun MIN ; Hokyoung SON
Mycobiology 2023;51(6):410-416
Fungi are cosmopolitan and they occupy diverse niches as consumers, producers, and decomposers. They play critical roles in the environment by enabling nutrient cycling and generating a plethora of secondary metabolites. This study aimed to identify and characterize fungal strains isolated from diverse sources on Muui Island, Republic of Korea. In 2023, a total of 86 fungal strains were collected and examined. Investigation of the morphological features and phylogenetic analyses of multiple barcode loci identified one putative novel species and two species previously unrecorded in the Republic of Korea: Colletotrichum sp., Colletotrichum guizhouense, and Fusarium brachygibbosum. This study provides a comprehensive description of their molecular phylogenies and morphological characteristics. These findings will contribute to the existing knowledge about fungal species in the Republic of Korea and future research on the fungal diversity on Muui Island.
5.Refractory Childhood Pyoderma Gangrenosum Successfully Treated with Infliximab
Soobin CHA ; Gi-Wook LEE ; Jun-Oh SHIN ; Dongyoung ROH ; Yeona KIM ; Sang-Hyeon WON ; Jungsoo LEE ; Kihyuk SHIN ; Hoonsoo KIM ; Byungsoo KIM ; Moon-Bum KIM ; Hyunchang KO
Korean Journal of Dermatology 2024;62(5):314-315
6.Triggered Electrooculography for Identification of Oculomotor and Abducens Nerves during Skull Base Surgery
Ha-Neul JEONG ; Sang-Il AHN ; Minkyun NA ; Jihwan YOO ; Woohyun KIM ; In-Ho JUNG ; Soobin KANG ; Seung Min KIM ; Ha Young SHIN ; Jong Hee CHANG ; Eui Hyun KIM
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2021;64(2):282-288
Objective:
: Electrooculography (EOG) records eyeball movements as changes in the potential difference between the negatively charged retina and the positively charged cornea. We aimed to investigate whether reliable EOG waveforms can be evoked by electrical stimulation of the oculomotor and abducens nerves during skull base surgery.
Methods:
: We retrospectively reviewed the records of 18 patients who had undergone a skull base tumor surgery using EOG (11 craniotomies and seven endonasal endoscopic surgeries). Stimulation was performed at 5 Hz with a stimulus duration of 200 μs and an intensity of 0.1–5 mA using a concentric bipolar probe. Recording electrodes were placed on the upper (active) and lower (reference) eyelids, and on the outer corners of both eyes; the active electrode was placed on the contralateral side.
Results:
: Reproducibly triggered EOG waveforms were observed in all cases. Electrical stimulation of cranial nerves (CNs) III and VI elicited positive waveforms and negative waveforms, respectively, in the horizontal recording. The median latencies were 3.1 and 0.5 ms for craniotomies and endonasal endoscopic surgeries, respectively (p=0.007). Additionally, the median amplitudes were 33.7 and 46.4 μV for craniotomies and endonasal endoscopic surgeries, respectively (p=0.40).
Conclusion
: This study showed reliably triggered EOG waveforms with stimulation of CNs III and VI during skull base surgery. The latency was different according to the point of stimulation and thus predictable. As EOG is noninvasive and relatively easy to perform, it can be used to identify the ocular motor nerves during surgeries as an alternative of electromyography.
7.The Inhibitory Effect of Korean Antismoking Advertisement on Smoking Urge.
Soobin JEONG ; Dai Jin KIM ; Jo Eun JEONG ; Eun Ju CHEON ; Min Hyeon PARK
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 2016;55(3):264-270
OBJECTIVES: This study compares the emotional reaction and inhibitory effect on smoking urge between foreign antismoking advertisements and Korean antismoking advertisements. METHODS: Twenty-seven male smokers responded to a self-report survey including a Questionnaire on Smoking Urge and on emotional reactions such as disgust, anger and fear after watching a foreign antismoking advertisement, neutral images, and a Korean antismoking advertisement. We compared the smoking urge between the foreign antismoking advertisement and Korean antismoking advertisement and investigated emotional reactions associated with reduction in the smoking urge. RESULTS: The foreign antismoking advertisement inhibited the smoking urge but Korean antismoking advertisement did not. A significantly higher emotional response was evoked by the antismoking advertisements than in neutral images. However, among the emotions respondents reported about the foreign antismoking advertisement, only disgust was significantly associated with smoking urge. CONCLUSION: These results support published research, in that warning labels with high-rated emotional reactions are associated with reduction in the smoking urge. High emotional reactions such as disgust may enhance the effect of Korean antismoking advertisements.
Anger
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Humans
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Male
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Smoke*
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Smoking Cessation
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Smoking*
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Surveys and Questionnaires
8.Development of an Indirect ELISA Featuring Plates Coated with Column Chromatographically Purified Canine Adenovirus Type-1 Antigen
Dong Kun YANG ; Ha Hyun KIM ; Siu LEE ; Miryeon JI ; Bok Hee HAN ; Soobin OH ; Bang Hun HYUN
Journal of Bacteriology and Virology 2020;50(1):17-24
Canine adenovirus type 1 (CAV-1) causes infectious hepatitis in members of the family Canidae, including dogs. An indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (I-ELISA) that detects CAV-1 antibodies is required for large-throughput tests of dog sera. We collected 165 serum samples from dogs of Chungbuk and Gyeongbuk provinces between February 2016 and October 2018. The Korean CAV-1 vaccine strain CAV1V was propagated in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells and purified via Nuvia cPrime anion-exchange chromatography; the virus served as an I-ELISA antigen. Virus-neutralizing anti-CAV-1 titers in dog sera were measured using the virus neutralization (VN) method. The I-ELISA was optimized using purified CAV-1 antigen and serum samples. This kit was used to evaluate dog sera. The VN and I-ELISA data were compared. The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of the I-ELISA were 97.0%, 74.2%, and 92.7% compared to the VN assay, respectively. The I-ELISA data significantly correlated with those of VN (r = 0.88). These results suggest that the I-ELISA is useful for serosurveillance of CAV-1 in dog sera.