1.Considerations of Flow Cytometric Lymphocyte Subset Analysis in Korea Based on a Survey of Current Clinical Laboratory Practice
Mikyoung PARK ; Hyun-Woo CHOI ; Jihyang LIM ; Kyung-Hwa SHIN ; Eun-Jee OH ; Jaewoo SONG ; Kyeong-Hee KIM ; In Hwa JEONG ; Joo-Heon PARK ; Sang-Hyun HWANG ; Eun-Suk KANG
Annals of Laboratory Medicine 2026;46(2):220-225
Flow cytometric lymphocyte subset analysis (FCLSA) is essential for assessing immune status across various diseases and clinical settings. We surveyed current clinical laboratory practices related to FCLSA to establish a baseline reference for future standardization in Korea. Nine university hospitals actively performing FCLSA responded to the 22-question survey, which covered seven categories of laboratory practice. These hospitals used commercial reagent antibody kits from either Beckton Dickinson Biosciences (N = 4) or Beckman Coulter Diagnostics (N = 5). Most hospitals performed daily instrument setup and scheduled maintenance every 2–6 months. Two levels of commercial quality control materials were routinely used each day. Sample and reagent antibody volumes varied across hospitals, even when the same reagent kit was used. Acquired cell counts ranged from 5 × 10 3 to 5 × 10 4 cells, with two hospitals adjusting counts based on the cell type analyzed. Most laboratories reported percentages and general opinions; some additionally reported white blood cell and lymphocyte counts, along with lymphocyte percentages. This is the first comprehensive survey on the clinical laboratory practice of FCLSA in Korea.Standardization of FCLSA should be accelerated to ensure reliable and reproducible results.
2.Clinical Outcomes of Endoscopic Radiofrequency Stretta Therapy for Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease Treatment: A Retrospective Analysis From2 Tertiary Centers in Korea
Hyun LIM ; Yuri KIM ; Jin Hee NOH ; Jung In LEE ; Eun Jeong GONG ; Boram CHA ; Chan Hyuk PARK ; Da Hyun JUNG ; Ju Yup LEE ; Sun Hyung KANG ; In Kyung YOO ; Joo Young CHO ; Do Hoon KIM ;
Journal of Neurogastroenterology and Motility 2026;32(2):290-297
Background/Aims:
Endoscopic anti-reflux therapy is a therapeutic option for gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), providing durable effects. However, clinical data from Korea remain limited. This study evaluates the clinical outcomes of endoscopic radiofrequency Stretta therapy in Korean patients.
Methods:
A retrospective analysis was conducted on 71 patients with GERD who underwent Stretta therapy at 2 tertiary hospitals in Korea between November 2015 and July 2021. Clinical outcomes, including patient satisfaction, medication cessation or reduction, and complications, were evaluated. Pre- and post-procedural esophageal manometry and 24-hour pH monitoring test results were also analyzed.
Results:
Patient satisfaction rates at 1, 6, and 12 months post-procedure were 54.7% (35/64), 70.0% (28/40), and 75.0% (21/28), respectively. Medication cessation or reduction was achieved in 31.2% (20/64) at 1 month, 70.0% (28/40) at 6 months, and 67.9% (19/28) at 12 months. Esophageal manometry (n = 21) showed no significant changes in mean lower esophageal sphincter pressure (18.7 mmHg [2.5-52.9] vs 17.4 mmHg [0.0-43.0], P = 0.702) or mean integrated relaxation pressure (8.2 mmHg [0.0-28.0] vs 10.1 mmHg [0.0-31.0], P = 0.840). The 24-hour pH monitoring (n = 18) demonstrated a nonsignificant decrease in acid exposure time (pH < 4) from 2.3% (0.0-8.4) to 1.6% (0.0-7.3) (P = 0.182). Similarly, the DeMeester score decreased non-significantly from 8.4 (0.8-27.7) to 6.6 (0.8-21.8) (P = 0.352). No procedure-related complications occurred.
Conclusion
Endoscopic radiofrequency Stretta therapy appears to be a safe treatment option for GERD and may provide favorable patient satisfaction and medication reduction.
3.Shifting the Paradigm of Medical Dispute Resolution: From Individual Punishment to System Improvement and Public Compensation
Hee Gyung KANG ; Eun Kyung EO ; Duseop KWON ; Sung-ju KIM ; HaDa RYUOK ; Serng Bai PAK ; Junghee AHN ; Minsu OCK ; Mihwa YOO ; Sang-il LEE ; Eunyoung CHO ; Eun Jin HA ; DongSeok HAN ; Juhwan OH
Korean Journal of Family Practice 2026;16(1):25-32
Legal risks and liability issues in medical practice serve as a primary catalyst for the current collapse of essential healthcare services in Korea. Currently, medical disputes in Korea are disproportionately focused on criminal prosecutions and high-damages civil litigation. This punitive approach fosters a culture of concealment, encourages defensive medicine, and accelerates the exodus of medical professionals from essential fields. Ultimately, this cycle deprives the system of opportunities for improvement and poses a significant threat to patient safety. In contrast, many advanced nations have adopted principles of “Just Culture” and “Safe Space,” prioritizing non-punitive reporting and systemic root-cause analysis over individual retribution. To address these issues, this paper proposes four key strategies: First, the establishment of an independent “Patient Safety Investigation Agency” to objectively investigate incidents and identify systemic flaws. Second, a transition from criminal punishment to licensing board-led management, focusing on re-education and counseling to maintain quality of care. Third, the enactment of “Apology Laws” to ensure that expressions of regret or apologies cannot be used as legal evidence of liability, thereby fostering trust and psychological recovery. Finally, the creation of a “Patient Safety Fund” to provide prompt and sufficient public compensation to victims regardless of proven negligence. In conclusion, it is imperative to shift the paradigm by defining medical accidents as “system failures” rather than individual faults. Strengthening the social safety net will encourage medical professionals to return to essential care and build a sustainable healthcare environment centered on patient safety.
4.Transition to a Primary Care–Centered Healthcare System: A Structural Reform for Korean Healthcare
Serng Bai PAK ; Sang-Hyun LEE ; Kyung-Hee CHO ; Juhwan OH ; Sang-il LEE ; Kunhee PARK ; Jae-Heon KANG ; Seung-Won OH ; Hee Gyung KANG ; Mihwa YOO
Korean Journal of Family Practice 2026;16(1):33-41
Korea’s healthcare system is at a critical juncture as rapid population aging, rising chronic disease burdens, and fragmented care expose the limits of a hospital-centered, fee-for-service model. Although policy discussions have long emphasized strengthening primary care and introducing a “family doctor” system, past reforms have focused mainly on expanding services or redefining professional roles, without establishing clear accountability, care continuity, or aligned payment mechanisms. Consequently, primary care remains weak and responsibility for comprehensive patient management is diffuse. This article argues that meaningful reform requires redefining the primary physician as an accountable manager of longitudinal, coordinated care within an integrated delivery and payment framework. Drawing on experiences from the United States, the United Kingdom, and several European countries, it identifies common features of successful primary care–oriented systems, including patient registration, team-based care, risk-adjusted payment, and explicit outcome accountability. Based on these insights, the authors propose a Korean primary physician model tailored to solo and small-group practices while fostering regional collaboration. Core elements include voluntary patient registration, multidisciplinary primary care teams, risk-stratified care management, regional care networks, and a mixed payment model combining per-member-per-month payments, shared savings, and performance-based incentives. The article emphasizes phased pilot testing focused on operational feasibility. Ultimately, transitioning to a primary care–centered system is presented as a strategic necessity for sustainability and improved care continuity.
5.Beyond the Dual Control Tower: Directions for Reforming the National Emergency Medical System to Enhance Patient Safety and Ensure Continuity in South Korea
Eun Kyung EO ; Heejun SHIN ; HaDa RYUOK ; Hee Gyung KANG ; Sung-ju KIM ; Eunyoung CHO ; Eun Jin HA ; Juhwan OH ; Mihwa YOO
Korean Journal of Family Practice 2026;16(1):17-24
Recurrent difficulty securing emergency department (ED) acceptance and delayed interfacility transfer, often resulting in multiple sequential transfer attempts (“round-robin” hospital seeking), in the Republic of Korea reflect a patient safety failure across the emergency care continuum, spanning Emergency Medical Services from emergency calls and prehospital care to ED stabilization, definitive treatment, and secondary transfer. We argue that the governance split between the National Fire Agency–led prehospital response and the Ministry of Health and Welfare–led emergency medical system fragments accountability and data, undermining sustainable quality management. We describe a “double bind” in which clinicians face medico-legal risk regardless of acceptance decisions, distorting transfer behavior. We propose an outcome-linked Quality Improvement system—integrated metrics, interoperable data linkage, operational medical control, and routine feedback—to strengthen Continuity of Patient Care. This requires functional integration of the dual command structure; transferring ambulance service functions to the Ministry of Health and Welfare, or an equivalently strong joint-governance model, should be evaluated. Regionally, responsibility-based systems should be implemented through councils that set transfer principles and resource allocation, supported by stable financing and performance review, with the regional emergency medical situation room providing medical control and real-time coordination. For mass-casualty incidents, preparedness should align standardized triage, integrated command and communication, training, and after-action review. Legal reform is a necessary starting point, but trust and sustained patient safety depend more on cultivating a learning-oriented safety culture grounded in patient experience and public deliberation throughout policy design and implementation.
6.What Should Be Done Right Now for Better Health System in 10 Years?: Health System Reform Tasks
Juhwan OH ; Sang-il LEE ; Kunhee PARK ; Seung-Won OH ; Junghee AHN ; HaDa RYUOK ; Eun Jin HA ; Seung-yeon CHO ; Sung-ju KIM ; Eunyoung CHO ; Hee Gyung KANG ; Serng Bai PAK ; Eun Kyung EO
Korean Journal of Family Practice 2026;16(1):1-8
South Korea’s current healthcare system stands at a critical crossroads that will determine whether it can progress in a better direction over the next decade. Behind the relatively stable level of population health that has been maintained until now, it has become clear that the deterioration of patient experiences, the risk of collapse in critical emergency medical services, the burnout of healthcare providers, and the crisis in the sustainability of healthcare finances have all accumulated simultaneously. This crisis can no longer be overcome by partial fixes or short-term measures alone. The answer to what needs to change first must begin with a reaffirmation of what the healthcare system should aim for. Ultimately, what needs to be changed now is not an individual policy, but the criteria and priorities through which we view healthcare. The focus must shift from what to provide more of, to questioning what holds greater social value. If such a shift does not begin now, in ten years we won’t face a better healthcare system, but care enmeshed in a deeper crisis. Now is precisely the time to fundamentally define the direction of the healthcare system.
7.Effects of Structured Psychodrama for Long-Term Psychiatric Inpatients: A Pilot Study
Hyun Seok SO ; Hee Kyung YUN ; Kyungmin KANG ; Hyunjun HWANG ; Yu Sang LEE
Korean Journal of Schizophrenia Research 2026;29(1):9-16
Objectives:
This pilot study examined the preliminary findings associated with a cognitive-load-controlled structured psychodrama program on affect, fear of negative evaluation, and general psychopathology in long-term psychiatric inpatients, most of whom had schizophrenia spectrum disorders.
Methods:
A single-group pre-post design was used. A total of 125 stabilized long-term psychiatric inpatients participated in a 25-session structured psychodrama program. To enhance measurement validity in consideration of participants’ cognitive characteristics, self-report measures were administered in small-group sessions with individualized explanation. Primary outcomes (Positive and Negative Affect Schedule [PANAS], Affect Balance Scale [ABS], and Brief Fear of Negative Evaluation [BFNE]) were assessed in 125 participants, and the secondary outcome (Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale [BPRS]) was assessed in a randomly selected subgroup of 53 participants.
Results:
After the intervention, positive affect significantly increased, whereas negative affect significantly decreased on both the PANAS and ABS (all p<0.001). BFNE scores significantly decreased from 43.14 to 28.94 (p<0.001). Total BPRS scores also significantly decreased from 47.49 to 34.76 (p<0.001), with notable improvements in depressive mood, anxiety, tension, somatic concern, and emotional withdrawal.
Conclusion
A structured psychodrama program may be a feasible and potentially beneficial psychosocial intervention for long-term psychiatric inpatients. However, given the single-group pre-post design and other methodological limitations, the magnitude of the observed changes should be interpreted cautiously. These findings may serve as preliminary data for future controlled trials.
8.The Role of Inflammasome in the Pathogenesis of Alopecia Areata:NLRP3 and Its Cascade Contribute to the Onset and Early Stage of Alopecia Areata
Ji-Hoon LIM ; Da-Hyun KANG ; Haena MOON ; Soon-Hyo KWON ; Bark-Lynn LEW
Annals of Dermatology 2026;38(3):202-209
Background:
The inflammasome, a multiprotein complex, is crucial in the pathogenesis of various autoinflammatory disorders. In particular, the NOD-like receptor family pyrin domain-containing 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome has recently been associated with diseases such as psoriasis, vitiligo, lupus, and alopecia areata (AA).
Objective:
The objective of this study is to investigate the potential involvement of the inflammasome in the pathogenesis of AA and to determine its correlation with clinical manifestations.
Methods:
A total of 144 patients with AA and 22 healthy controls were included. Scalp skin and serum samples were collected to assess the levels of NLRP3-related molecules in lesional tissue and blood, respectively. Additionally, we performed immunostaining to measure the expression of NLRP3 and caspase-1 in the outer root sheath (ORS).
Results:
Lesional interleukin-1β expression was significantly elevated in patients with AA at all stages compared with controls. In the progressive stage, lesional C-X-C motif chemokine ligand 10 levels were markedly higher than those in controls and other stages. Serum interferon-γ levels were also significantly increased during the progressive stage of AA compared with controls. Immunostaining revealed strong NLRP3 and caspase-1 positivity in the ORS during the initial and progressive stages of AA, in contrast to the recovery stage.
Conclusion
These results highlight the functional role of the inflammasomes in the pathogenesis of AA.
9.Single-field reconstruction of congenital longitudinal cleft earlobes using large Z-plasty and dermofat grafting
Youngjin KIM ; Jun PARK ; Sang Yoon KANG ; Jin Sik BURM
Archives of Craniofacial Surgery 2026;27(2):108-111
Congenital longitudinal cleft earlobes (CLCEs) present a ginkgo leaf–shaped malformation with combined skin and soft-tissue deficiency along the inferior margin. No previous method has addressed both deficiencies while preserving earlobe length and contour. We introduce a simple, single-field procedure that combines a large, single Z-plasty for complete skin preservation with dermofat grafting for volumetric restoration. A Z-plasty was designed on the cleft-side skin, with the central limb placed along the cleft valley and the opposing limbs aligned with the anterior and posterior ridges of both lobules. After elevating both triangular flaps and fully releasing the contracted fibrotic tissue at the cleft base, a compact, dense dermofat graft harvested from the ipsilateral mastoid area was inserted into the inferior marginal defect and anchored to prevent superior migration. The Z-plasty flaps were then transposed and closed without skin sacrifice. Postoperatively, the superior portion of the earlobe was compressed to prevent graft displacement. At 16–32 months of follow-up, all reconstructed earlobes maintained stable volume and natural contour without horizontal or vertical shortening. This combined technique provides a reliable, tissue-preserving, and cosmetically favorable option for correcting CLCEs, effectively resolving both skin and soft-tissue deficiencies within a single operative field.
10.Parental and child perspectives on healthy lifestyles and artificial intelligence chatbot use among childhood and adolescent cancer survivors: a descriptive comparative study in South Korea
Kyung-Ah KANG ; Shin-Jeong KIM ; In-Hye SONG ; Hee-Jin YOON
Child Health Nursing Research 2026;32(1):27-38
Purpose:
This study compared healthy lifestyle (HLS) practices and awareness regarding the use of chatbots (A-uC) for health management between childhood and adolescent cancer survivors (CACSs) and their parents, with the aim of assessing the feasibility of tailored artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot-based interventions for holistic survivorship care.
Methods:
A descriptive comparative design was employed involving 80 CACSs and 80 parents (N=160) recruited through the Korean Pediatric Cancer Foundation. HLS practices were assessed using a validated seven-domain instrument encompassing physical activity, nutrition, interpersonal relations, stress management, positive life perspective, health responsibility, and spiritual health. A-uC was evaluated using an extended technology acceptance model-based tool. Responses to the open-ended question addressing unmet HLS practices were analyzed using latent Dirichlet allocation topic modeling.
Results:
No significant differences were observed between CACSs and parents in overall HLS (CACSs: 3.16±0.80; parents: 3.18±0.36, p=.74). While perceptions across most A-uC domains did not differ significantly, parents demonstrated a significantly higher “intention to use” chatbots for health management than CACSs (p=.03). The mean A-uC scores exceeded 4 (out of 5) in both groups, reflecting positive perceptions of chatbot-based HLS support. Topic modeling identified “exercise,” “healthy diet,” and “regular lifestyle” as common unmet areas.
Conclusion
CACSs and their parents share largely concordant views on HLS and A-uC, with a strong interest in chatbot interventions. These findings underscore the potential of tailored AI chatbot programs to address unmet lifestyle needs and promote holistic survivorship care.

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