1.A Concept Analysis on Patient-Centered Care in Hospitalized Older Adults with Multimorbidity
Youn Jung SON ; Heun Keung YOON
Journal of Korean Critical Care Nursing 2019;12(2):61-72
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to explore the attributes, antecedents, and consequences of patient-centered care (PCC) for older adults with multimorbidity in acute care hospitals.METHODS: The concept analysis performed by Walker and Avant was used to analyze PCC. Fifteen studies from the literature related to PCC appear in systematic literature reviews in the fields of theology, medicine, psychology, and nursing.RESULTS: PCC in acute care hospitals was defined according to the five attributes of ‘maintaining patient autonomy’, ‘empowering self-care’, ‘individualized and relationship-based care’, ‘shared decision-making’, and ‘creating a homelike environment’. Antecedents of PCC were found to be a respect for patients' preferences, qualifications of the nursing staff, care coordination and integration, and organizational support. Consequences of effective PCC were a functional status; health-related quality of life; satisfaction with care, mortality, and medical costs from the perspective of the patient and family; and quality of care and therapeutic relationships from nurses' viewpoints.CONCLUSION: PCC as defined by the results of this study will contribute to the foundation of institutionalization and the creation of a safe and healthy acute care hospital culture focused on patients' preferences and values.
Adult
;
Comorbidity
;
Humans
;
Institutionalization
;
Mortality
;
Nursing
;
Nursing Staff
;
Patient-Centered Care
;
Psychology
;
Quality of Life
;
Theology
;
Walkers
2.Psychiatric Manifestation in Patients with Parkinson's Disease.
Ji Won HAN ; Yebin D AHN ; Won Seok KIM ; Cheol Min SHIN ; Seong Jin JEONG ; Yoo Sung SONG ; Yun Jung BAE ; Jong Min KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2018;33(47):e300-
Parkinson's disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder. Although its major manifestation is motor symptoms, resulting from the loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra, psychiatric symptoms, such as depression, anxiety, hallucination, delusion, apathy and anhedonia, impulsive and compulsive behaviors, and cognitive dysfunction, may also manifest in most patients with PD. Given that the quality of life — and the need for institutionalization — is so highly dependent on the psychiatric well-being of patients with PD, psychiatric symptoms are of high clinical significance. We reviewed the prevalence, risk factors, pathophysiology, and treatment of psychiatric symptoms to get a better understanding of PD for improved management.
Anhedonia
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Anxiety
;
Apathy
;
Compulsive Behavior
;
Delusions
;
Dementia
;
Depression
;
Dopaminergic Neurons
;
Hallucinations
;
Humans
;
Institutionalization
;
Neurodegenerative Diseases
;
Parkinson Disease*
;
Prevalence
;
Psychotic Disorders
;
Quality of Life
;
Risk Factors
;
Substantia Nigra
3.Scientizing Everyday Life, Rationalizing Eating Habits: The Rise of Nutrition Science in 1910s-1920s Japan.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2018;27(3):447-484
Historians of science have noted that modern nation-states and capitalism necessitated the systematic creation and implementation of a wide array of knowledge and technologies to produce a more productive and robust population. Commonly labeled as biopolitical practices in Foucauldian sense, such endeavors have often been discussed in the realms of public hygiene, housing, birth control, and child mortality, among others. This article is an attempt to extend the scope of the discussion by exploring a relatively understudied domain of nutrition science as a critical case of social engineering and intervention, specifically during and after World War I in the case of Japan. Research and dissemination of knowledge on food and health in Japan, like other industrializing nation-states, centered on new public hygiene initiatives since the late nineteenth-century. However, in the aftermath of WWI, or more precisely, after the Rice Riots of 1918, a new trend began to dominate the discourse of nutrition and health. In the face of wartime inflation and the resultant nation-wide riots, physicians and social scientists alike began to view the food choice and budget issue as a solution to the middle class crisis. This new perception drew on the conceptual framework to understand food, metabolism, and cost in the language of quantifiable nutrition vis-à-vis monetary values. By analyzing how specific nutritional knowledge was translated into the tenets for public campaigns to reform everyday life, this paper ultimately sheds light on the institutionalization of a new area of research, nutrition (eiyō) in Japan.
Budgets
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Capitalism
;
Child
;
Child Mortality
;
Contraception
;
Eating*
;
Housing
;
Hygiene
;
Inflation, Economic
;
Institutionalization
;
Japan*
;
Metabolism
;
Nutritional Sciences*
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Rationalization
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Riots
;
World War I
4.Predictors of Institutionalization in Patients with Alzheimer's Disease in South Korea.
Dong Gyu PARK ; Soojin LEE ; Young Min MOON ; Duk L NA ; Ji Hyang JEONG ; Kyung Won PARK ; Yoon Hwan LEE ; Tae Sung LIM ; Seong Hye CHOI ; So Young MOON
Journal of Clinical Neurology 2018;14(2):191-199
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: We investigated predictors of institutionalization in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) in South Korea. METHODS: In total, 2,470 patients with AD aged 74.5±7.8 years (mean±standard deviation, 68.1% females) were enrolled from November 2005 to December 2013. The dates of institutionalization were identified from the public Long-Term-Care Insurance program in January 2014. We used a Cox proportional-hazards model to identify predictors for future institutionalization among characteristics at the time of diagnosis in 2,470 AD patients. A similar Cox proportional-hazards model was also used to investigate predictors among variables that reflected longitudinal changes in clinical variables before institutionalization in 816 patients who underwent follow-up testing. RESULTS: A lower Mini Mental State Examination score [hazard ratio (HR)=0.95, 95% confidence interval (CI)=0.92–0.97] and higher scores for the Clinical Dementia Rating and Neuro-Psychiatric Inventory (HR=1.01, 95% CI=1.00–1.01) at baseline were independent predictors of institutionalization. The relationship of patients with their main caregivers, presence of the apolipoprotein E e4 allele, and medication at baseline were not significantly associated with the rate of institutionalization. In models with variables that exhibited longitudinal changes, larger annual change in Clinical Dementia Rating Sum of Boxes score (HR=1.15, 95% CI=1.06–1.23) and higher medication possession ratio of antipsychotics (HR=1.89, 95% CI=1.20–2.97) predicted earlier institutionalization. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that among Korean patients with AD, lower cognitive ability, higher dementia severity, more-severe behavioral symptoms at baseline, more-rapid decline in dementia severity, and more-frequent use of antipsychotics are independent predictors of earlier institutionalization.
Alleles
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Alzheimer Disease*
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Antipsychotic Agents
;
Apolipoproteins
;
Behavioral Symptoms
;
Caregivers
;
Dementia
;
Diagnosis
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Institutionalization*
;
Insurance
;
Korea*
5.A historical perspective of the mandatory service policy in the Philippines: A document analysis.
Paolo Victor N. MEDINA ; Danika Joy B. BARDELOSA ; Aubrey B. LARA ; Michelle D. AVELINO ; Azar G. AGBON ; Ma. Rhenea Anne M. CENGCA ; Demi Arantxa C. SEPE ; Mikko Anthony L. TING ; Jonathan P. GUEVARRA ; Carl Abelardo T. ANTONIO
Philippine Journal of Health Research and Development 2018;22(3):1-12
BACKGROUND: The Philippines has, mandatory service policies to address the insufficiency and maldistribution of human resources particularly for health services. Despite being perceived as an appropriate intervention to bridge the aforementioned HRH gaps, the past and present implementations of such programs in the country have never been formally studied.
OBJECTIVE: This paper aimed to present the history of mandatory service programs in the Philippines, look at their natures, and see how their different implementations relate to each other.
METHODOLOGY: Using a qualitative document analysis method, administrative issuances and reports relevant to past and current implementations of mandatory service policies in the Philippines were obtained and reviewed.
RESULTS: Mandatory service programs have been implemented in the country by institutions from both the private and public sectors as early as 1968. The focus of such has been mostly for government positions and specialized professions including physicians and scientists. While extensive efforts have been made through the years, the policies demonstrated fragmentation and recurring gaps in implementation. Such gaps include the lack of enabling policy mechanisms, formal monitoring and evaluation, and program institutionalization.
CONCLUSION: The historical narrative of return service programs in the country is a potential source for the development of an overarching mandatory service policy framework for human resources in the Philippines, one that is specific to the context and setting of the country. By articulating policy issues identified, this paper provided a stepping-off point for future mandatory service program policy planning, implementation, evaluation, and institutionalization in the Philippines.
Workforce ; Institutionalization ; Physicians
6.The Evaluation of Feasibility and Predictive Validity of Comprehensive Korean Frailty Instrument: Using the 2008 and 2011 Living Profiles of Older People Survey in Korea.
Journal of Korean Academy of Community Health Nursing 2017;28(2):206-215
PURPOSE: This study aimed to verify the predictive validity of Comprehensive Korean Frailty Instrument (CKFI) among older adults. METHODS: A secondary analysis of data from a prospective cohort study was conducted. Frailty was determined in older adults (N=9,188) according to the data in 2008 and the effects of frailty on adverse outcomes (such as institutionalization and death) were evaluated according to the data in 2011. The Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS) index was used to compare with the predictive validity of CKFI. RESULTS: The prevalence of frailty was 26.3%. With the CKFI, the frail group had a higher risk of negative health outcomes compared to the robust and pre-frail groups after three years. The two of the highest risks identified using the CKFI and CHS index were institutionalization (5.522 times higher) and mortality (3.210 times higher). For both instruments, the survival analysis revealed that the risk of death increased as the degree of frailty increased. CONCLUSION: The CKFI consisting of self-report items and multidimensional aspects of frailty can be used as a simple instrument for assessing the frailty of older adults residing in a local community in Korea.
Adult
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Aged
;
Cohort Studies
;
Frail Elderly
;
Humans
;
Institutionalization
;
Korea*
;
Long Term Adverse Effects
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Mortality
;
Prevalence
;
Prospective Studies
7.Current State of Vocational Rehabilitation Program for Individuals with Disabling Mental Illness in Korea
Myung Hun HAN ; Ji Woong KIM ; Do Yoon KIM ; Hye Sun PARK ; Hanson PARK ; Tae Yeon HWANG ; Yongjin SEO ; Seung Jun KIM ; Woo Young IM ; Sang Min LEE
Korean Journal of Psychosomatic Medicine 2017;25(2):145-152
OBJECTIVES: There has been long lasting trend of deinstitutionalization and public health centered care in management of individuals with disabling mental illness. We aimed to investigate current vocational rehabilitation state and effectiveness of system in korea. METHODS: We carried basic survey via telephone and e-mail beforehand to figure out how many and which institutions are operating vocational rehabilitation programs to psychiatric patients. A questionnaire packages were sent to total of 108 institutions in Korea which were operating occupation rehabilitation program. RESULTS: Of 108 institutions, 40.74% were returned with answers. The person in charge of vocational rehabilitation at each institution was mainly mental health social worker(48.8%), and the budget under \1,000,000 was the majority(61.5%) among surveyed institutions. The most commonly used vocational rehabilitation programs was case management(23.1%), followed by psychosocial rehabilitation program(21.2%), and on-the-job training(17.9%). The most effective program was case management(27.4%), followed by psychosocial rehabilitation program(19.8%), on-the-job training(17.9%). The main barrier of occupation rehabilitation to be conducted widely was ‘worries about being excluded from beneficiary of National Basic livelihood Protection Act’. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that, in spite of high demand in vocational rehabilitation programs, government financial support is still lacking.
Budgets
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Deinstitutionalization
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Electronic Mail
;
Financial Support
;
Government Programs
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Humans
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Korea
;
Mental Disorders
;
Mental Health
;
Occupations
;
Psychiatric Rehabilitation
;
Public Health
;
Rehabilitation
;
Rehabilitation, Vocational
;
Schizophrenia
;
Telephone
8.Male involvement in maternal health.
Rovea Ernazelle G. AUSTRIA ; Carl Abelardo T. ANTONIO
Philippine Journal of Health Research and Development 2017;21(2):25-32
Traditionally, programs related to maternal health are regarded as purely a woman's domain. Nevertheless, the role of the male as the decision maker in the household gave way to the recognition of the male's role in maternal and reproductive health. This paper aimed to provide a review on male involvement strategies and their impact on maternal health based on related studies, discuss the strategies in the Philippine context and suggest interventions given the current state of the Philippine health care system. These strategies utilize the decision-making role of the male by positing itself on the reproductive, sexual and maternal health aspects encompassing important factors, such as birth spacing, first pregnancy, family planning, utilization of skilled birth attendants (SBAs), and delivery in health facilities, antenatal and postpartum care and nutrition. However, negative repercussions include stigmatization of single mothers and reinforcement of the notion of a man's control over a woman's body. Given the current state of the Philippine health care system, the suggested interventions try to veer away from it as much as possible. These include integration of the male involvement strategy into the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps), coursing it through a public-private partnership (PPP) and non-government organizations (NGOs), involvement of educational institutions, strengthening of the health service delivery at the grassroots level, reinforcement of existing laws, and research on its institutionalization. With carefully-planned strategies that recognize existing gender norms and other sociocultural factors, male involvement in maternal health could be a possible catalyst in decreasing the Philippine maternal mortality rate (MMR).
Human ; Male ; Female ; Pregnancy ; Maternal Mortality ; Reproductive Health ; Birth Intervals ; Family Planning Services ; Public-private Sector Partnerships ; Stereotyping ; Maternal Health ; Mothers ; Postnatal Care ; Parturition ; Family Characteristics ; Gender Identity ; Delivery, Obstetric ; Decision Making ; Institutionalization ; Health Facilities
9.The Food Hygiene Institutionalization of Park Junghee Government in 1960s.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2016;25(2):205-239
This article investigates the historical background and distinctive characteristics of the Korean food hygiene policy during the 1960s. The 3 main findings of this study are as follows. First, Food Sanitation Law in the 1960s was established too hastily and thus mistakenly accommodated two discordant laws as American style law and empire of Japan style law. The legislation of Food Sanitation Law was progressed too quickly for the justification purpose of 5·16 military coup, as one of reorganization tasks of the Korean legal structure established under Japanese imperialism, Second, a division in charge of food hygiene in the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs was newly installed in 1967, as an outcome reflecting a variety of social demand, at least, minimally. Rongalite shock in Korea prompted diverse suggestions for preventing unfortunate accidents from toxic and harmful food. However, Korean Government did not provide the division with necessary budget and manpower to implement relevant regulations. Third, "the special law against health crimes" legislated in 1969, was characterized by severe punishment policy which might be performed afterward but not by protective measures against accidents in advance. The law enabled regulators to punish corrupt dealers up to life sentence. For the constitutional amendment for President for the third term, Park Chung-hee's regime tried to calm down the complaints of people. In sum, the regulations of Korean food hygiene in the 1960s were identified as government practices using an interesting combination of low costs and severe punishments.
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
;
Budgets
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Humans
;
Hygiene*
;
Institutionalization*
;
Japan
;
Jurisprudence
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Korea
;
Legislation as Topic
;
Military Personnel
;
Punishment
;
Sanitation
;
Shock
;
Social Control, Formal
10.Health in All Policies: The Evolution of Health Promotion and Intersectoral Cooperation.
Health Policy and Management 2016;26(1):79-91
'Health in All Policies' is a new strategy for governance for health in 21st century. The evolution of health promotion has affected the creation of the strategy through the efforts to tackle health inequalities by addressing social determinants of health. More concern about health inequalities, involving wider policy areas, and higher level of institutionalization distinguish the strategy from the old intersectoral collaboration such as intersectoral action for health and healthy public policy. Making intersectoral collaboration the mainstream of policy making is important to address integrated policy agendas such as 'Health in All Policies' and 'Sustainable Development Goals.' Political leadership and interpersonal skills are also required to strengthen the capacity of public health sector for implementing 'Health in All Policies' in local, national, and international circumstances.
Cooperative Behavior
;
Health Promotion*
;
Institutionalization
;
Leadership
;
Policy Making
;
Public Health
;
Public Policy
;
Social Determinants of Health
;
Socioeconomic Factors


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