1.Psychiatric interview with children and adolescent.
Journal of the Korean Academy of Family Medicine 2001;22(8):1175-1180
No abstract available.
Adolescent*
;
Child*
;
Humans
2.Psychosocial Adaptation in Children with Growth Hormone Deficiency.
Mi Jung PARK ; Yee Jin SHIN ; Hae Jung SHIN ; Duk Hee KIM
Journal of Korean Society of Pediatric Endocrinology 2000;5(1):83-92
PURPOSE: Emotional and behavioral disturbances have been reported in severe short stature children. The purpose of this study was to examine psychosocial problems in children with Growth hormone deficiency(GHD), comparing with their normal height siblings. METHODS: Twenty three children with GHD(17 boys and 6 girls, mean age:13.1+/-2.8 yrs) were included. Their normal height siblings(8 boys and 2 girls, mean age:12.3+/-2.9 yrs) were included as control group. Parents of all participating children completed the Child Behavior Checklist. Patients 10 years and older completed the Youth Self Report. RESULTS: 1)Internalizing problem scores(somatic complaints, anxiety, depression, social incompetence) were higher in GHD compared to control group(49.0+/-15.0 vs 43.2+/-6.2, P<0.05). Externalizing problem scores and social competences were not different between GHD and control group. 2) Total problem scores in GHD were not different by sex. 3)Total problem scores were not different between idiopathic GHD and organic GHD. 4)Attention problems(r=0.45, P<0.05), delinquent behavior(r=0.49, P=0.01) and aggressive behavior(r=0.51, P<0.01) increased by age. 5)Height SDS negatively correlated with social problem(r=-0.47, P<0.05) and delinquent behavior(r=-0.61, P<0.01). Height SDS also negatively correlated with somatic complaints(r=-0.75, P<0.01), anxiety and depression(r=-0.66, P=0.01). CONCLUSION: Internalized problems such as somatic complaints, anxiety and depression were higher in GHD than control group. Behavioral problem scores were increased by age and behavioral problem scores were correlated with height deficit. When we treat GHD children, appropriate medical and psychological counseling should be included.
Adolescent
;
Anxiety
;
Checklist
;
Child Behavior
;
Child*
;
Counseling
;
Depression
;
Female
;
Growth Hormone*
;
Humans
;
Parents
;
Self Report
;
Siblings
3.Understanding of Sexual Violence and the Role of Health Care Provider in Korea
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 2019;58(4):260-269
The issues raised by the ‘me too’ movement, which have been alarming members of Korean society since early 2018, are ‘unspeakable.’ In past instances of sexual violence, the silence of some victims indicated there was no crime and no harm. The societal approach that did not identify, name, or reveal the damage made the existence of ‘sexual violence’ possible. In the medical community, it is necessary for sexual violence victims who visit medical institutions to ensure the victim can “talk†to a health care provider. Medical practitioners need to have the knowledge, skills, and experiences to enable victims of sexual violence to engage in professional interventions at each stage of sexual violence treatment. During each stage, medical staff should base their treatment on an understanding of the specific situation of the sexual violence victim. In this review article, we introduce various phenomena associated with sexual violence that is aimed at minority groups, including technology-facilitated sexual violence.
4.Professional opinions on the social service systems required for coping with and preventing child sexual abuse in Korea.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2010;53(11):948-951
In Korea, concerns over child sexual abuse have been rising recently because of the fatal consequences for victims and the fact that the incidence has continued to increase even after the government's efforts to intensify the punishment of perpetrators. While the angry and painful responses of many Koreans to recent incidents of child sexual abuse, such as the Jo Doo Soon case, are intense enough to lead to the government's urgent reactions to resolve it, few systematic, comprehensive approaches to coping with and preventing sexual abuse of children and adolescents have been developed. To establish efficient systems for coping with and preventing child sexual abuse, well trained experts such as physicians, psychologists, and social workers, and social service systems to train these professionals as well as institutions to provide appropriate medical and welfare services are essential. However, the current systems supporting victims of child sexual abuse, such as the Sunflower Children's Center, One-stop Center, and other counseling centers, are not well coordinated and lack knowledgeable professionals. Furthermore, since there is no responsible government department to integrate the social welfare and legal systems for child sexual abuse, services are inefficient and decentralized. Thus to cope with and prevent child sexual abuse in Korea, we need to establish good, efficient social service systems to train experts, to coordinate each organizations, to integrate child sexual abuse treatment and prevention into the general child welfare system, and to establish enough service centers to provide all legal, medical, welfare, and other services required.
Adolescent
;
Child
;
Child Abuse, Sexual
;
Child Welfare
;
Counseling
;
Helianthus
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Korea
;
Phosphatidylethanolamines
;
Punishment
;
Sex Offenses
;
Social Welfare
;
Social Workers
5.The Effectiveness of Traumatic Symptom Checklist for Children(TSCC): Comparisons of Sexually Abused Children and Nonabused Normal Children.
So Young SON ; Tae Kyoung KIM ; Yee Jin SHIN
Journal of the Korean Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 2007;18(1):49-57
OBJECTIVES: The research is designed in order to know how much Traumatic Symptom Checklist for Children(TSCC) is effective in the case of child abuses, especially in the estimation of the psychopathology of child sexual abuse. METHODS: A sample includes a group of thirty children of 4th, 5th and 6th grade whose sexual abuse have confirmed and also a group of thirty four normal kids who have no abuse. Along with TSCC, Children's Depression Inventory(CDI) and Revised Children's Manifest Anxiety Scale(RCMAS) were used to children and child behavior checklist(K-CBCL), sexual behaviors(CSBI), and Kiddie-Schedule for Affective Disorder and Schizophrenia-Present and Lifetime version (K-SADS-PL) record sheets were used to kids' parents. RESULTS: In case of the sexual abuse group, the most meaningful difference from the analyzed result is shown at sexual concerns scale which is one of the clinical scale in TSCC(p<.01). Also, the sexual abuse group has the meaningful higher score than the general group's one in the stress scale after the other anxiety, depression, anger and dissociation (p<.01). CONCLUSION: The scale of TSCC has relatively shown the characteristic symptom and severity which were gained from the children who have experienced trauma, especially sexual abuse.
Anger
;
Anxiety
;
Checklist*
;
Child Abuse
;
Child Abuse, Sexual
;
Child Behavior
;
Child*
;
Depression
;
Humans
;
Mood Disorders
;
Parents
;
Psychopathology
;
Sex Offenses
6.Cerebral Perfusion Assessed with 99m-Tc-ECD-SPECT in Childrens with Attachment Disorder.
Keun Ah CHEON ; Kyung Sook LEE ; Yee Jin SHIN
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 2001;40(1):98-108
OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to reveal that severe disturbance of attachment relationship with primary care-giver can affect functional brain development by measuring with technetium-99m ethyl cysteinate dimer brain single-photon emission tomography. METHODS: Subjects were 12 children aged 2-6 years who met the diagnostic criteria of reactive attachment disorder. Diagnostic tools were DSM-IV, ICD-10, Strange Situation Procedure(SSP), Vineland Social Maturity Sclae(SMS), and Childhood Autism Rating Scale(CARS). Brain SPECT was performed in all sbjects and each SPECT scan was visually assessed by two nuclear medicine specilalists. RESULTS: Eleven of 12 children had abnormal brain perfusion on SPECT scans, revealing focal areas of decreased perfusions. Perfusion of thalamus was decreased in 10 subjects decreased perfusion of left thalamus(6/10), right thalamus(1/10), and both thalami(3/10). Perfusion of basal ganglia was decreased in 5 children. Four children had decreased perfusion of thalamus as well as of basal ganglia. Decreased perfusion of parietal area was noted in only one child on SPECT scan. All subjets had normal perfusion of frontal, temporal, occipital, cerebellar areas on SPECT scan. CONCLUSIONS: Perfusion abnormalities involving thalamus, basal ganglia in most children with attachment disorder were found in this study. These results suggest that brain development of infant could be impeded by severe pathologic care and early nurturing environment would be important for normal brain development.
Autistic Disorder
;
Basal Ganglia
;
Brain
;
Child*
;
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
;
Humans
;
Infant
;
International Classification of Diseases
;
Nuclear Medicine
;
Perfusion*
;
Rabeprazole
;
Reactive Attachment Disorder
;
Thalamus
;
Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon
7.Burkitt Lymphoma in Children.
Soo Jong HONG ; Dong Kyu JIN ; Hee Young SHIN ; Hyo Seop AHN ; Chang Yee HONG ; Je G CHI
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 1988;31(4):482-491
No abstract available.
Burkitt Lymphoma*
;
Child*
;
Humans
8.Reliability and Validity of the KOREAN VERSION of the Preschool Temperament and Character Inventory(K-psTCI).
Jin Kyun PARK ; Ji Woong KIM ; Seon Wan KI ; Yee Jin SHIN
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 2004;43(4):425-434
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the reliability and validity of the Korean version of Preschool Temperament and Character Inventory (K-psTCI), a questionnaire based on Cloninger's seven-factor model of personality. METHODS: The psTCI was translated into Korean and administered to 266 children aged 2-6 years. A test-retest study of the K-psTCI was conducted across a 4-month interval. Internal consistency was calculated by Cronbach alpha. Test-retest and reliability was analyzed by Pearson correlation analysis. Factor analyses for the temperament and character dimensions were performed using principal component analysis, rotating factors by varimax. The psTCI scores of Korean and United States preschoolers there compared. RESULTS: Cronbach alpha values for the K-psTCI scales ranged from .62 to .78 for each dimensions. Test-retest correlations (r) ranged from .50 to .77 for each dimensions. Explorative factor analysis with the condition of eigenvalue greater than 2 produced four factors for the temperament items and three factors for the character items like the US original version of psTCI. Through factor analyses, five items in the K-psTCI were categorized differently from the US version of psTCI. Korean preschoolers had higher mean scores on Cooperativeness (CO) in males as compared to a sample of US preschoolers. CONCLUSION: The results of this study suggests that the Korean preschool TCI is satisfactory in reliability and validity.
Child
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Principal Component Analysis
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Reproducibility of Results*
;
Temperament*
;
United States
;
Weights and Measures
9.A Case of Extranasopharyngeal Angiofibroma Originating from Superior Turbinate.
Ho Jin SON ; Jae Jin KO ; Yee Hyuk KIM ; Seung Heon SHIN
Journal of Rhinology 2014;21(2):122-125
Angiofibromas originate predominantly from the posterolateral wall of the nasopharynx and are typically seen in adolescent males, but they may also exist outside of the nasopharynx. Nine patients with extranasopharyngeal angiofibromas have been reported in Korea. The inferior turbinate was the most commonly affected site, and patients reported experiencing various nasal symptoms, such as epistaxis and nasal obstruction. Extranasopharyngeal angiofibroma arising from the superior turbinate is extremely rare and has not been reported to date. Recently we experienced a case of angiofibroma of the left superior turbinate in a 68-year-old male that was successfully treated with endoscopic surgery.
Adolescent
;
Aged
;
Angiofibroma*
;
Epistaxis
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Male
;
Nasal Obstruction
;
Nasopharynx
;
Turbinates*
10.Expression of Hepatocyte Growth Factor and its receptor in Placentas of Mild and Severe Preeclampsia.
Jee Hyun LEE ; Jong Chul SHIN ; Dae Young JUNG ; Eun Jung BAEK ; Hee Bong MOON ; Dong Eun YANG ; Sa Jin KIM ; Chang Yee KIM ; Soo Pyung KIM
Korean Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 2000;43(8):1444-1449
No abstract available.
Hepatocyte Growth Factor*
;
Hepatocytes*
;
Placenta*
;
Pre-Eclampsia*