1.Factors Related to Smoking Status Among Young Adults: An Analysis of Younger and Older Young Adults in Korea
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2019;52(2):92-100
OBJECTIVES:
Young adulthood represents a critical developmental period during which the use of tobacco may begin or cease. Furthermore, differences in smoking behaviors between younger (aged 18-24 years) and older (aged 25-34 years) young adults may exist. This study aimed to characterize patterns related to current smoking in younger and older young adults.
METHODS:
This study used data acquired from the Sixth Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey conducted from 2013 to 2014. A total of 2069 subjects were categorized as younger (712 subjects) and older (1357 subjects) young adults. The chi-square test was used to assess the relationships between smoking status and socio-demographic, health-related, and smoking-related factors. Multivariable logistic regression models were constructed to assess the factors affecting current smoking in these age groups.
RESULTS:
The current smoking prevalence was 18.3% among the younger young adults and 26.0% among the older young adults. Sex, education level, occupation, perceived health status, alcohol consumption, and electronic cigarette use were related to current smoking in both age groups. Secondhand smoke exposure at home and stress levels showed significant relationships with smoking in younger and older young adults, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS
Strong correlations were found between the observed variables and smoking behaviors among young adults. Determining the factors affecting smoking and designing interventions based on these factors are essential for smoking cessation in young adults.
2.The Development and Operation of a Home Management System during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Experience of the Local Government Gyeonggi-do in Korea
Yeji LEE ; Jin-Ok HAN ; Heeyoung LEE ; Seungkwan LIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2021;36(19):e134-
During the three the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) surges in South Korea, there was a shortage of hospital beds for COVID-19 patients, and as a result, there were cases of death while waiting for hospitalization. To minimize the risk of death and to allow those confirmed with COVID-19 to safely wait for hospitalization at home, the local government of Gyeonggido in South Korea developed a novel home management system (HMS). The HMS team, comprised of doctors and nurses, was organized to operate HMS. HMS provided a two-way channel for the taskforce and patients to monitor the severity of patient's condition and to provide healthcare counseling as needed. In addition, the HMS team cooperated with a triage/bed assignment team to expedite the response in case of an emergency, and managed a database of severity for real-time monitoring of patients. The HMS became operational for the first time in August 2020, initially managing only 181 patients; it currently manages a total of 3,707 patients. The HMS supplemented the government's COVID-19 confirmed case management framework by managing patients waiting at home for hospitalization due to lack of hospital and residential treatment center beds. HMS also could contribute a sense of psychological stability in patients and prevented the situation from worsening by efficient management of hospital beds and reduction of workloads on public healthcare centers. To stabilize and improve the management of COVID-19 confirmed cases, governments should organically develop self-treatment and HMS, and implement a decisive division of roles within the local governments.
3.The Development and Operation of a Home Management System during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Experience of the Local Government Gyeonggi-do in Korea
Yeji LEE ; Jin-Ok HAN ; Heeyoung LEE ; Seungkwan LIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2021;36(19):e134-
During the three the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) surges in South Korea, there was a shortage of hospital beds for COVID-19 patients, and as a result, there were cases of death while waiting for hospitalization. To minimize the risk of death and to allow those confirmed with COVID-19 to safely wait for hospitalization at home, the local government of Gyeonggido in South Korea developed a novel home management system (HMS). The HMS team, comprised of doctors and nurses, was organized to operate HMS. HMS provided a two-way channel for the taskforce and patients to monitor the severity of patient's condition and to provide healthcare counseling as needed. In addition, the HMS team cooperated with a triage/bed assignment team to expedite the response in case of an emergency, and managed a database of severity for real-time monitoring of patients. The HMS became operational for the first time in August 2020, initially managing only 181 patients; it currently manages a total of 3,707 patients. The HMS supplemented the government's COVID-19 confirmed case management framework by managing patients waiting at home for hospitalization due to lack of hospital and residential treatment center beds. HMS also could contribute a sense of psychological stability in patients and prevented the situation from worsening by efficient management of hospital beds and reduction of workloads on public healthcare centers. To stabilize and improve the management of COVID-19 confirmed cases, governments should organically develop self-treatment and HMS, and implement a decisive division of roles within the local governments.
4.Factors Related to Smoking Status Among Young Adults: An Analysis of Younger and Older Young Adults in Korea
Korean Journal of Preventive Medicine 2019;52(2):92-100
OBJECTIVES: Young adulthood represents a critical developmental period during which the use of tobacco may begin or cease. Furthermore, differences in smoking behaviors between younger (aged 18-24 years) and older (aged 25-34 years) young adults may exist. This study aimed to characterize patterns related to current smoking in younger and older young adults. METHODS: This study used data acquired from the Sixth Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey conducted from 2013 to 2014. A total of 2069 subjects were categorized as younger (712 subjects) and older (1357 subjects) young adults. The chi-square test was used to assess the relationships between smoking status and socio-demographic, health-related, and smoking-related factors. Multivariable logistic regression models were constructed to assess the factors affecting current smoking in these age groups. RESULTS: The current smoking prevalence was 18.3% among the younger young adults and 26.0% among the older young adults. Sex, education level, occupation, perceived health status, alcohol consumption, and electronic cigarette use were related to current smoking in both age groups. Secondhand smoke exposure at home and stress levels showed significant relationships with smoking in younger and older young adults, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Strong correlations were found between the observed variables and smoking behaviors among young adults. Determining the factors affecting smoking and designing interventions based on these factors are essential for smoking cessation in young adults.
Alcohol Drinking
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Education
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Electronic Cigarettes
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Humans
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Korea
;
Logistic Models
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Nutrition Surveys
;
Occupations
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Prevalence
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Smoke
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Smoking Cessation
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Smoking
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Tobacco
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Tobacco Smoke Pollution
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Young Adult
5.Lunch Eating Pattern and Dietary Habits of High School Students Attending Online Classes during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Journal of the Korean Dietetic Association 2021;27(4):263-275
The COVID-19 pandemic has led to the curtailing of school meal services. This study aimed to compare the diets of students attending online classes who prepared their own lunch under these circumstances, with those of their counterparts who had their lunch prepared for them. In December 2020, a survey was conducted on 204 students (75 male and 129 female) at a high school in Gyeonggi-do. The results showed that more girls prepared their own lunch than boys (53.5% vs. 36.0%, respectively, P<0.05). Further, more participants with working mothers prepared their own lunch compared to those with unemployed mothers (60.8% vs. 23.0%, respectively, P<0.001). Lunch was prepared either by parents (47.5%), themselves (47.1%), or others (5.4%). A comparison of the Nutrition Quotient (NQ) was carried out between the subjects who prepared their own lunch and those who ate lunch prepared by their parents. The students who prepared their own lunch had significantly lower total (P<0.05), balance (P<0.01), and environment (P<0.01) sectors of NQ-A than their counterparts. Especially, subjects whose parents prepared their lunch had beanㆍtofuㆍsoy milk more frequently (P<0.01), tended to eat vegetables more frequently (P=0.059), and skipped breakfast less frequently (P<0.01). In conclusion, this study suggested that high school students who have to prepare their own lunch at home during the COVID-19 pandemic are the newly emerging nutritionally vulnerable group. This study may provide the basic information necessary for preparing measures to maintain the diet quality of high school students during the COVID-19 pandemic and similar situations in the future when school meal services may not be available.
6.Comparative Study on the National Health Screening Programs according to the Health Insurance System
Yeji LEE ; Eunyoung KIM ; Donghyun LEE
Health Policy and Management 2021;31(3):272-279
Background:
Korea’s health screening program has been faced the need for changes as the population and diseases structure are changing. In addition to Korea, many countries operate state-led health check-up programs to improve the health level of the people, and the operating methods of the program appear in various forms according to each country’s health insurance system. This study examines other state-led health screening programs and proposes a direction for the development of Korea’s health screening program.
Methods:
The study was conducted using the literature review method, and the “country” was set as a unit for the case analysis. The operating method of the health screening programs and the financial resources were compared according to the health insurance system. Five countries were selected as Korea, the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, and Taiwan.
Results:
The analyzed countries mainly operate the health screening program as a management method for chronic diseases, but there were differences in the operating method, financing, and targeted subjects and examination items. In most countries, a risk assessment was performed prior to the examination (screening), and the subjects who needed the examination were first selected, and a follow-up management service was provided in accordance with the risk each individual exposed.
Conclusion
Rather than applying the same screening method to populations with different risk levels, a health screening program will be constructed in consideration of the individual’s health level and exposure risk, and the healthcare delivery system will be reorganized so that screening and treatment services can be linked.
7.Differences in Hemoglobin Levels as Measured by Blood Gas and Auto Blood Cell Count Analyzers.
Seoyoung YOON ; Yeji CHA ; Oh Hun KWON ; Woonhyung LEE
Korean Journal of Blood Transfusion 2009;20(3):242-246
BACKGROUND: While point-of-care testing is being used increasingly as a basis for making decisions about erythrocyte transfusion, no valid standards or guidelines have been developed concerning the accuracy of measuring hemoglobin concentration. METHODS: To compare results from blood gas and auto blood cell count analyzers with respect to hemoglobin, 40 patient blood residual samples which had been withdrawn into 4 mL sodium heparin and EDTA tubes, were analyzed twice by each devices. RESULTS: Passing-Bablok comparisons for hemoglobin (g/dL) with the Nova CCX (y) and Advia 2120 (x) were y=0.877x+2.471 (r=0.985). Additionally, hemoglobin levels from the blood gas analyzer were out of the calculated range at the clinical decision point. CONCLUSION: Blood gas analyzers as point-of care testing exhibited a slightly higher hemoglobin level than auto blood cell count analyzers. Some also produced values of hemoglobin out of the expected range at the clinical decision point. Therefore, the use of blood gas analyzers for hemoglobin levels is limited and it is recommended that the assessment of hemoglobin for transfusion should be determined using auto blood cell count analyzers.
Blood Cell Count
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Blood Cells
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Edetic Acid
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Erythrocyte Transfusion
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Hemoglobins
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Heparin
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Humans
8.Independent correlates of the toenail chromium level and the association between the chromium level and dyslipidemia
Yeji KANG ; Yujin LEE ; Jakyung SON ; Kyong PARK
Journal of Nutrition and Health 2018;51(1):40-49
PURPOSE: The number of patients with dyslipidemia have been increasing steadily over the past few decades in South Korea. The association between the chromium level and chronic disease has attracted considerable interest, but few studies have been conducted on the Korean population. The aim of this study was to identify the dietary and non-dietary correlates of the toenail chromium level, and evaluate the association between the toenail chromium level and dyslipidemia. METHODS: The baseline data of an ongoing prospective cohort study in Yeungnam area in South Korea were analyzed. A total of 500 participants aged 35 years or older who completed questionnaires on their demographics, lifestyle characteristics, and medical information were included. The toenail chromium level was analyzed by neutron activation analysis. The dietary intake was assessed using a validated 146-item semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire. The blood lipid profiles were obtained from medical examinations conducted by the Korean National Health Insurance Service or medical institutions. RESULTS: Higher chromium levels were associated with the residential area (urban), higher education level, higher intakes of noodles and vegetables, and lower intake of fruits. Multiple logistic regression analysis showed that the toenail chromium levels were not associated significantly with the prevalence of dyslipidemia (odds ratio: 0.99, 95% confidence interval: 0.61 ~ 1.60). CONCLUSION: This study is the first study in Korea to determine the independent correlates of the toenail chromium levels and the association between chromium exposure and dyslipidemia. These findings provide useful scientific evidence for the development of chromium intake guidelines for the Korean population.
Chromium
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Chronic Disease
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Cohort Studies
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Demography
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Dyslipidemias
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Education
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Fruit
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Humans
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Korea
;
Life Style
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Logistic Models
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Nails
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National Health Programs
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Neutron Activation Analysis
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Prevalence
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Prospective Studies
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Vegetables
9.Different Effects of Cognitive and Non-exercise Physical Leisure Activities on Cognitive Function by Age in Elderly Korean Individuals.
Mi Sook JUNG ; Hyunli KIM ; Yeji LEE ; Mijung KIM ; Eunyoung CHUNG
Osong Public Health and Research Perspectives 2017;8(5):308-317
OBJECTIVES: We aimed to examine the effects of various leisure activities on cognitive impairment in young-old (aged 65–74 years) and old-old (aged ≥ 75 years) adults. METHODS: In total, 10,279 elderly Korean individuals from the 2014 Korean National Survey on Older Adults’ cohort were enrolled in our study. Cognitive impairment was assessed using the standardized score of the Mini-Mental State Examination for Dementia Screening, whereas leisure activities were recorded via self-reporting of the extent and type of leisure activity the subjects involved in over the past year. Multivariate logistic regression was used to assess the effect of leisure activities on cognitive impairment, while controlling for potential covariates. RESULTS: The subjects were more likely to participate in cognitive activities than in non-exercise physical activities. After controlling for selected covariates, involvement in cognitive activities was found to be a significant predictor of cognitive impairment in both the groups, whereas involvement in non-exercise physical activities was not a predictor of cognitive impairment in individuals aged ≥ 75 years. Moreover, depressive symptoms, rural residence, and hearing difficulties were common predictors of cognitive impairment among elderly-Korean-individuals. CONCLUSION: Leisure activity involvement may help delay cognitive impairment, which is often concomitant with aging. Hence, an early intervention service may significantly benefit both young-old and old-old individuals.
Adult
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Aged*
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Aging
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Cognition Disorders
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Cognition*
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Cohort Studies
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Dementia
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Depression
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Early Intervention (Education)
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Hearing
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Humans
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Leisure Activities*
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Logistic Models
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Mass Screening
;
Motor Activity
10.Neuro-ophthalmological Consultations in the Emergency Department of a Tertiary Referral Emergency Center
Jiehoon KWAK ; Yeji MOON ; Byung Joo LEE
Journal of the Korean Ophthalmological Society 2023;64(11):1095-1103
Purpose:
We report the clinical features, diagnoses, and treatments of patients with neuro-ophthalmological diseases presenting to a tertiary referral center emergency room (ER) of South Korea.
Methods:
We retrospectively analyzed the medical records of 205 patients who visited the ER of the Asan Medical Center and then were referred to our neuro-ophthalmology department from May 2020 to April 2022. The initial diagnoses of ophthalmology residents were compared to the final diagnoses of neuro-ophthalmologists. We describe the symptoms, diagnoses, and treatments.
Results:
The median time from the onset of symptoms to the ER visit was 3 days; diplopia (49.1%) and vision loss/a visual field defect (38.9%) were the chief complaints. The most common causes of diplopia were isolated cranial nerve 4 (37.5%), 6 (22.9%), and 3 palsy (18.4%) and supranuclear palsy (9.2%). In patients with vision loss/visual field defect, the most common causes were optic (20.5%), ischemic (17.1%), and compressive (8.0%) optic neuropathies. For 121 cases (59.0%), multidisciplinary consultations with the departments of neurology, neurosurgery, and internal medicine were scheduled. After initial management in the ER, 38 diagnoses (18.5%) changed after evaluation by neuro-ophthalmologists.
Conclusions
Over half of all neuro-ophthalmology patients presenting to an ER required comprehensive interdisciplinary evaluation and over a third required inpatient treatment.