1.The Trend and Prospect of Studies on the History of Western Medicine in Korea.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2010;19(1):89-117
Studies on the history of Western medicine in Korea began to be actively conducted and published since the restart of the Korean Society for the History of Medicine in 1991, which had been originally inaugurated in 1947, and the publication of its official journal, the Korean Journal of Medical History in 1992. In 1970s and 1980s, even before the start of the Journal, articles on a history of Western medicine were published mainly written by physicians in medical journals. This paper aims to provide an overview of the publications on the history of Western medicine in Korea, comparing papers published in the Journal with those published in other journals. Authors of the papers in the Journal are those who majored in history of medicine or history science whose initial educational backgrounds were medicine or science, whereas authors of the papers in other journals majored in Western history, economic history, social history, religious history, or women's history. While a large portion of papers in the Journal deal with medicine in ancient Greek or in modern America with no paper on medieval medicine, the papers in other journals deal with more various periods including ancient, medieval and modern periods and with diverse areas including France, Britain, Germany, Europe etc. Recent trends in 2000s show an increase in the number of researchers who published the history of Western medicine in other journals, total number of their publications, and the topics that they dealt with in their papers. In contrast, however, the number of researchers published in the Journal, the number of the papers and its topics - all decreased in recent years. Only three papers on the history of diseases have been published in the Journal, while eleven published in other journals. In order to stimulate research on the history of Western medicine in Korea, concerted efforts are necessary including academic communication among various disciplines, formulation of a long term plan to enlarge the pool of researchers and readers of the history of Western medicine, and development of strategic educational programs for both graduates and undergraduates including students of medicine and of humanities in Korea.
Education, Medical/history
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Europe
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History, 20th Century
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History, 21st Century
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History, Ancient
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History, Medieval
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Humans
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Korea
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Periodicals as Topic/*history
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Publishing/history
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Research/*history/trends
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Students, Medical
2.Social status and role of students entering Jejoongwon: focus on Kyum-Rae Lee.
Young Kyoung KIM ; Hyoung Woo PARK ; Jae Hoon ROH
Korean Journal of Medical History 2001;10(1):60-70
This study considers the social class and social role of the entering students of Jejoongwon at that time in light of its very first medical graduate, Kyum-Rae Lee. Foremost, Kyum-Rae Lee was confirmed to have been from a middle-class family. However, unlike other chungin-class families, his family belonged to the minority. He seemed to have entered medical school to seek opportunity to move up in social class by taking advantage of special government provisions, which allowed him to learn English and Western medicine. Afterwards, he performed heroic services in the peasant-war, proceeded up to administration and participated in the modernization of Great Han Empire. With his knowledge of Western concepts, he became involved in numerous social activities, such as organizing the Enlightenment Society and leading the Enlightenment Movement. In much the same way, most early students were from low-class background with exceptional personal abilities and were able to pass aptitude examinations. Such achievements allowed them to apply for positions in the military and administrative management. Ten years later, medical education to train medical professionals was revived with changes in attitudes of people of Chosun Dynasty toward Western medicine and with creation of formal medical study.
Education, Medical/*history
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English Abstract
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History of Medicine, Modern
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Korea
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*Social Class
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Students, Medical/*history
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Western World/*history
3.Correlation between nonverbal communication and objective structured clinical examination score in medical students.
Seung Guk PARK ; Kyung Hye PARK
Korean Journal of Medical Education 2018;30(3):199-208
PURPOSE: Nonverbal communication (NVC) may be a crucial factor affecting effective communication between patients and medical students during the objective structured clinical examination (OSCE), but it has not been intensively studied. We examined NVC and its correlation with patient-physician interaction (PPI) in the OSCE. METHODS: A total of 68 video recordings of routine check-up OSCEs were included. A checklist for NVC was developed that included seven nonverbal factors in a mute state (NVM) and four nonverbal factors in speech (NVS), and one point was assigned to each factor. The scores for history taking, PPI, NVM, and NVS were compared, and correlations of each score were evaluated. RESULTS: Students with adequate facial expressions, accorded speech rate and voice volume, adequately matched voice tone, and few or no moments of unnecessary silence showed better PPI scores. The PPI score was correlated with history taking and the NVS score, but not the NVM score. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that NVS may be more influential to PPI during OSCEs than NVM. Communication teachers should help students to be better prepared to use both NVS and NVM properly.
Checklist
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Education, Medical
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Facial Expression
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Humans
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Medical History Taking
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Nonverbal Communication*
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Patient Satisfaction
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Students, Medical*
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Video Recording
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Voice
4.Centennial History of Yonsei University Dermatology in Korea: 1917 to 2017.
Jihee KIM ; Tae Gyun KIM ; Si Hyung LEE ; Min Kyung LEE ; Jong Hoon KIM ; Sang Eun LEE ; Do Young KIM ; Mi Ryung ROH ; Chang Ook PARK ; Ju Hee LEE ; Min Geol LEE ; Dongsik BANG ; Sang Ho OH ; Kee Yang CHUNG
Annals of Dermatology 2018;30(5):513-521
Yonsei Dermatology celebrated its centennial in 2017, marking 100 years since Kung Sun Oh established the first Department of Dermatology and Urology in Korea in 1917. Following the footsteps of Kung Sun Oh, a pioneer of Korean dermatology, its members united and worked to provide the best medical service and achieve academic milestones in dermatology. Over the past hundred years, Yonsei Dermatology has played a pivotal role in the advancement of medical science and academia in Korea. The main activities of the department include medical care, education, and dermatologic research. Its research activities have encompassed a wide spectrum of dermatologic manifestations from skin immunology and pathology to introduction of newly developed treatment technologies. As Kung Sun Oh was the first Korean professor of dermatology at Severance Medical School and a passionate educator, we continue to serve his will by nurturing medical students and dermatology specialists to serve as global medical leaders. The Kung Sun Oh Memorial Lecture, first hosted in 1977, was the beginning of mutual international academic exchange in the field of dermatology in Korea. The memorial lecture has played a major role in advancing the academic status of Korean dermatological science by inviting distinguished dermatologists from around the world as guest lecturers. Yonsei Dermatology has played a key role in the history of modern medicine and dermatology in Korea over the last 100 years and continues to make an impact.
Allergy and Immunology
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Dermatology*
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Education
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History, Modern 1601-
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Humans
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Korea*
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Pathology
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Schools, Medical
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Skin
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Solar System
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Specialization
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Students, Medical
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Urology
5.Medical students' agenda-setting abilities during medical interviews.
Hyerin ROH ; Kyung Hye PARK ; Young Jee JEON ; Seung Guk PARK ; Jungsun LEE
Korean Journal of Medical Education 2015;27(2):77-86
PURPOSE: Identifying patients' agendas is important; however, the extent of Korean medical students' agenda-setting abilities is unknown. The study aim was to investigate the patterns of Korean medical students' agenda solicitation. METHODS: A total of 94 third-year medical students participated. One scenario involving a female patient with abdominal pain was created. Students were video-recorded as they interviewed the patient. To analyze whether students identify patients' reasons for visiting, a checklist was developed based on a modified version of the Calgary-Cambridge Guide to the Medical Interview: Communication Process checklist. The duration of the patient's initial statement of concerns was measured in seconds. The total number of patient concerns expressed before interruption and the types of interruption effected by the medical students were determined. RESULTS: The medical students did not explore the patients' concerns and did not negotiate an agenda. Interruption of the patient's opening statement occurred in 4.62+/-2.20 seconds. The most common type of initial interruption was a recompleter (79.8%). Closed-ended questions were the most common question type in the second and third interruptions. CONCLUSION: Agenda setting should be emphasized in the communication skills curriculum of medical students. The Korean Clinical Skills Exam must assess medical students' ability to set an agenda.
Adult
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Checklist
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*Clinical Competence
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*Communication
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Curriculum
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*Education, Medical, Undergraduate
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Female
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Humans
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Male
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*Medical History Taking
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*Physician-Patient Relations
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Republic of Korea
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*Students, Medical
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Universities
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Video Recording
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Young Adult
6.Assessing clinical reasoning abilities of medical students using clinical performance examination.
Sunju IM ; Do Kyong KIM ; Hyun Hee KONG ; Hye Rin ROH ; Young Rim OH ; Ji Hyun SEO
Korean Journal of Medical Education 2016;28(1):35-47
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to investigate the reliability and validity of new clinical performance examination (CPX) for assessing clinical reasoning skills and evaluating clinical reasoning ability of the students. METHODS: Third-year medical school students (n=313) in Busan-Gyeongnam consortium in 2014 were included in the study. One of 12 stations was developed to assess clinical reasoning abilities. The scenario and checklists of the station were revised by six experts. Chief complaint of the case was rhinorrhea, accompanied by fever, headache, and vomiting. Checklists focused on identifying of the main problem and systematic approach to the problem. Students interviewed the patient and recorded subjective and objective findings, assessments, plans (SOAP) note for 15 minutes. Two professors assessed students simultaneously. We performed statistical analysis on their scores and survey. RESULTS: The Cronbach α of subject station was 0.878 and Cohen κ coefficient between graders was 0.785. Students agreed on CPX as an adequate tool to evaluate students' performance, but some graders argued that the CPX failed to secure its validity due to their lack of understanding the case. One hundred eight students (34.5%) identified essential problem early and only 58 (18.5%) performed systematic history taking and physical examination. One hundred seventy-three of them (55.3%) communicated correct diagnosis with the patient. Most of them had trouble in writing SOAP notes. CONCLUSION: To gain reliability and validity, interrater agreement should be secured. Students' clinical reasoning skills were not enough. Students need to be trained on problem identification, reasoning skills and accurate record-keeping.
Checklist
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*Clinical Competence
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Communication
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Comprehension
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*Education, Medical, Undergraduate
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Educational Measurement/*standards
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Humans
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Medical History Taking
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Medical Records
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Observer Variation
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Physical Examination
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Physician-Patient Relations
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*Problem-Based Learning
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Reproducibility of Results
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Republic of Korea
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*Schools, Medical
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*Students, Medical
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Surveys and Questionnaires
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*Thinking
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Universities
7.The relationship between medical students' epistemological beliefs and achievement on a clinical performance examination.
Sun A OH ; Eun Kyung CHUNG ; Eui Ryoung HAN ; Young Jong WOO ; Deiter KEVIN
Korean Journal of Medical Education 2016;28(1):29-34
PURPOSE: This study was to explore the relationship between clinical performance examination (CPX) achievement and epistemological beliefs to investigate the potentials of epistemological beliefs in ill-structured medical problem solving tasks. METHODS: We administered the epistemological beliefs questionnaire (EBQ) to fourth-year medical students and correlated the results with their CPX scores. The EBQ comprised 61 items reflecting five belief systems: certainty of knowledge, source of knowledge, rigidity of learning, ability to learn, and speed of knowledge acquisition. The CPX included scores for history taking, physical examination, and patient-physician interaction. RESULTS: The higher epistemological beliefs group obtained significantly higher scores on the CPX with regard to history taking and patient-physician interaction. The epistemological beliefs scores on certainty of knowledge and source of knowledge were significantly positively correlated with patient-physician interaction. The epistemological beliefs scores for ability to learn were significantly positively correlated with those for history taking, physical examination, and patient-physician interaction. CONCLUSION: Students with more sophisticated and advanced epistemological beliefs stances used more comprehensive and varied approaches in the patient-physician interaction. Therefore, educational efforts that encourage discussions pertaining to epistemological views should be considered to improve clinical reasoning and problem-solving competence in the clinic setting.
*Achievement
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Adult
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*Attitude
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*Clinical Competence
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*Culture
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*Education, Medical, Undergraduate
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Educational Measurement
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Female
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Humans
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*Knowledge
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Male
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Medical History Taking
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Physical Examination
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Physician-Patient Relations
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Problem-Based Learning
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Republic of Korea
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Schools, Medical
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*Students, Medical
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Surveys and Questionnaires
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Thinking
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Young Adult