1.Cancer Patients' and Caregivers' Experiences Admitted to Comprehensive Nursing Care Service Wards: An Exploratory Qualitative Research
Sarah LIM ; Mee Young CHO ; Hyun Joo SHIN ; Ki Yeon SONG ; Soo Kyoung SHIM ; Yoon Jung LEE ; Hea Jin KWON ; Ji Eun KIM ; Hui Ean KIM ; Hyun Ja PARK ; Han Wool AN ; So Jeong HYEON ; Sue KIM
Asian Oncology Nursing 2024;24(4):173-183
Purpose:
The purpose of this study was to explore and assess the experiences of cancer patients and their caregivers who had been admitted to comprehensive nursing care service wards.
Methods:
Data were collected from 10 patients and 10 caregivers by in-depth interviews. The data were analyzed using content analysis of Downe-Wamboldt.
Results:
Three categories and seven subcategories were extracted. 1) Realizing institutional limitations of comprehensive nursing care service: ‘Wishing for precise operating systems based on patient severity,’ ‘Anticipating active caregiver participation in treatment process,’ ‘Requiring a countermeasure for safety accidents,’ 2) Professional nursing service which provides relief: ‘Patient-centered professional nursing service,’ ‘Inpatient service that provides relief for patients and caregivers,’ 3) Anticipating continuous use of the service: ‘Inpatient service which users are willing to reuse,’ ‘Wishing for expansion and reinforcement of the service.’
Conclusion
Cancer patients and their caregivers experienced institutional limitations while satisfied with professional nursing service and willing to reuse the service. To improve this situation, institutional support such as separate wards for severe patients, measures for active caregiver participation and prevention of safety accidents, and adequate staffing would be helpful for relatively severe level cancer patients and their caregivers.
2.Cancer Patients' and Caregivers' Experiences Admitted to Comprehensive Nursing Care Service Wards: An Exploratory Qualitative Research
Sarah LIM ; Mee Young CHO ; Hyun Joo SHIN ; Ki Yeon SONG ; Soo Kyoung SHIM ; Yoon Jung LEE ; Hea Jin KWON ; Ji Eun KIM ; Hui Ean KIM ; Hyun Ja PARK ; Han Wool AN ; So Jeong HYEON ; Sue KIM
Asian Oncology Nursing 2024;24(4):173-183
Purpose:
The purpose of this study was to explore and assess the experiences of cancer patients and their caregivers who had been admitted to comprehensive nursing care service wards.
Methods:
Data were collected from 10 patients and 10 caregivers by in-depth interviews. The data were analyzed using content analysis of Downe-Wamboldt.
Results:
Three categories and seven subcategories were extracted. 1) Realizing institutional limitations of comprehensive nursing care service: ‘Wishing for precise operating systems based on patient severity,’ ‘Anticipating active caregiver participation in treatment process,’ ‘Requiring a countermeasure for safety accidents,’ 2) Professional nursing service which provides relief: ‘Patient-centered professional nursing service,’ ‘Inpatient service that provides relief for patients and caregivers,’ 3) Anticipating continuous use of the service: ‘Inpatient service which users are willing to reuse,’ ‘Wishing for expansion and reinforcement of the service.’
Conclusion
Cancer patients and their caregivers experienced institutional limitations while satisfied with professional nursing service and willing to reuse the service. To improve this situation, institutional support such as separate wards for severe patients, measures for active caregiver participation and prevention of safety accidents, and adequate staffing would be helpful for relatively severe level cancer patients and their caregivers.
3.Cancer Patients' and Caregivers' Experiences Admitted to Comprehensive Nursing Care Service Wards: An Exploratory Qualitative Research
Sarah LIM ; Mee Young CHO ; Hyun Joo SHIN ; Ki Yeon SONG ; Soo Kyoung SHIM ; Yoon Jung LEE ; Hea Jin KWON ; Ji Eun KIM ; Hui Ean KIM ; Hyun Ja PARK ; Han Wool AN ; So Jeong HYEON ; Sue KIM
Asian Oncology Nursing 2024;24(4):173-183
Purpose:
The purpose of this study was to explore and assess the experiences of cancer patients and their caregivers who had been admitted to comprehensive nursing care service wards.
Methods:
Data were collected from 10 patients and 10 caregivers by in-depth interviews. The data were analyzed using content analysis of Downe-Wamboldt.
Results:
Three categories and seven subcategories were extracted. 1) Realizing institutional limitations of comprehensive nursing care service: ‘Wishing for precise operating systems based on patient severity,’ ‘Anticipating active caregiver participation in treatment process,’ ‘Requiring a countermeasure for safety accidents,’ 2) Professional nursing service which provides relief: ‘Patient-centered professional nursing service,’ ‘Inpatient service that provides relief for patients and caregivers,’ 3) Anticipating continuous use of the service: ‘Inpatient service which users are willing to reuse,’ ‘Wishing for expansion and reinforcement of the service.’
Conclusion
Cancer patients and their caregivers experienced institutional limitations while satisfied with professional nursing service and willing to reuse the service. To improve this situation, institutional support such as separate wards for severe patients, measures for active caregiver participation and prevention of safety accidents, and adequate staffing would be helpful for relatively severe level cancer patients and their caregivers.
4.Long-Term Outcomes and Risk Factors for Lymph Node Metastasis in Siewert Type II/III Early Gastric Cancer
Min Young SON ; Dae Hyeon CHO ; Sung Eun KIM ; Seun Ja PARK ; Moo In PARK ; Won MOON ; Jae Hyun KIM ; Jung Wook LEE ; Kyoungwon JUNG
The Korean Journal of Helicobacter and Upper Gastrointestinal Research 2024;24(3):252-258
Objectives:
The incidence of adenocarcinomas of the esophagogastric junction (EGJ) and cardia has been gradually increasing in the East. Cancers of the EGJ and gastric cardia have poor prognoses. This study aimed to investigate lymph node metastasis (LNM) rates, their predictive factors, and determine the long-term outcomes of patients with Siewert type II/III early gastric cancer (EGC).
Methods:
Between January 2014 and June 2022, a total of 573 patients with gastric cancer, including 130 with Siewert type II/III EGC, underwent total gastrectomies at the Kosin University Gospel Hospital. Factors associated with LNM were analyzed using a logistic regression model.
Results:
Of the 130 patients with Siewert type II/III EGC, 10 (7.7%) demonstrated LNM (LNM-positive group). Macroscopically elevated lesions (I+IIa) (60.0% vs. 16.7%; p=0.009) and lymphovascular invasion (70.0% vs. 5.8%; p<0.001) were more common and the depth of invasion was deeper (p=0.003) in the LNM-positive patients than in the LNMnegative group. Multivariate analysis showed that macroscopically elevated lesions (odds ratio [OR], 19.48; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.93–197.11; p=0.012) and lymphovascular invasion (OR, 52.63; 95% CI, 5.26–526.51; p=0.001) were associated with LNM. Kaplan–Meier analysis revealed that the 5-year overall and disease-specific survival rates of patients with Siewert type II/III EGC were 90.0% and 98.9%, respectively. During a median follow-up period of 49 months (range, 12–122 months), one patient (0.8%) died owing to gastric cancer recurrence.
Conclusions
Patients with Siewert type II/III EGC showed favorable long-term outcomes. Macroscopically elevated lesions and lymphovascular invasion are associated with LNM.
5.Feasibility of Establishing a Stroke Care System through the Acute Stroke Hotline in Busan Metropolitan Area
Ja Hyeon CHO ; Hye-In CHUNG ; Byeol-A YOON ; Dae-Hyun KIM ; Jae-Kwan CHA
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2023;41(4):274-280
Background:
The importance of establishing a regional stroke safety net for the treatment of acute stroke is increasingly emphasized. In this study, we analyzed effectiveness of transferring the suspected acute ischemic stroke (AIS) patients through the 1899-0215 hotline system from 119 ambulances and nearby hospitals.
Methods:
From July 2015 to July 2022, we analyzed data from 632 suspected acute stroke patients through the hotline. Furthermore, we investigated the proportion of patients in the target population who were eligible for reperfusion therapy and compared cases transferred by 119 emergency services (EMS) with those transferred from nearby hospitals.
Results:
Six hundred thirty-two suspected acute stroke patients were transferred to our stroke center through the 1899-0215 hotline system. The accuracy of diagnosing acute stroke among transferred patients is 81.0% for 119 EMS and 80.5% for cases transferred from nearby hospitals. Of the 200 patients transferred from hospitals, they were transferred from 47 nearby hospitals with an average transfer distance of 38.2 km and an average transfer time of 65 minutes. Among 291 patients diagnosed with AIS, The onset-to-door time was significantly shorter (p<0.01) for patients transferred by 119 EMS. The proportion of patients who received reperfusion therapy was significantly higher (p<0.01) for those transferred by 119 EMS.
Conclusions
The hotline service will become a useful tool for establishing a regional stroke network in the Busan area, and its effectiveness will be particularly useful for 119 EMS. Measures are needed in the Busan metropolitan region to ensure the speediness of transferring acute stroke patients between hospitals.
7.Hypertensive Brainstem Encephalopathy Combined with Acute Ischemic Stroke
Seon Jeong KIM ; Ja Hyeon CHO ; Bora JIN ; Dae-Hyun KIM
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2022;40(3):235-239
Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome is a clinicoradiological syndrome characterized by a unique reversible pattern on imaging and total regression of clinical symptoms and signs. Hypertensive brainstem encephalopathy (HBE), a brainstem variant of posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome, is rare. In addition, a concomitant occurrence of acute ischemic stroke and HBE is even more rare. We here report three patients with HBE accompanied by acute cerebral infarction detected by brain magnetic resonance imaging and the importance of initial blood pressure control.
8.Prediction of Pathologic Findings with MRI-Based Clinical Staging Using the Bayesian Network Modeling in Prostate Cancer: A Radiation Oncologist Perspective
Chan Woo WEE ; Bum-Sup JANG ; Jin Ho KIM ; Chang Wook JEONG ; Cheol KWAK ; Hyun Hoe KIM ; Ja Hyeon KU ; Seung Hyup KIM ; Jeong Yeon CHO ; Sang Youn KIM
Cancer Research and Treatment 2022;54(1):234-244
Purpose:
This study aimed to develop a model for predicting pathologic extracapsular extension (ECE) and seminal vesicle invasion (SVI) while integrating magnetic resonance imaging-based T-staging (cTMRI, cT1c-cT3b).
Materials and Methods:
A total of 1,915 who underwent radical prostatectomy between 2006-2016 met the inclusion/exclusion criteria. We performed a multivariate logistic regression analysis as well as Bayesian network (BN) modeling based on possible confounding factors. The BN model was internally validated using 5-fold validation.
Results:
According to the multivariate logistic regression analysis, initial prostate-specific antigen (iPSA) (β=0.050, p < 0.001), percentage of positive biopsy cores (PPC) (β=0.033, p < 0.001), both lobe involvement on biopsy (β=0.359, p=0.009), Gleason score (β=0.358, p < 0.001), and cTMRI (β=0.259, p < 0.001) were significant factors for ECE. For SVI, iPSA (β=0.037, p < 0.001), PPC (β=0.024, p < 0.001), Gleason score (β=0.753, p < 0.001), and cTMRI (β=0.507, p < 0.001) showed statistical significance. BN models to predict ECE and SVI were also successfully established. The overall area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC)/accuracy of the BN models were 0.76/73.0% and 0.88/89.6% for ECE and SVI, respectively. According to internal comparison between the BN model and Roach formula, BN model had improved AUC values for predicting ECE (0.76 vs. 0.74, p=0.060) and SVI (0.88 vs. 0.84, p < 0.001).
Conclusion
Two models to predict pathologic ECE and SVI integrating cTMRI were established and installed on a separate website for public access to guide radiation oncologists.
9.Tolosa-Hunt Syndrome Presenting as Cluster-Like Headache
Ja Hyeon CHO ; Seon Jeong KIM ; Dae-Hyun KIM
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2021;39(4):343-346
A 48-year-old man came with a left-sided headache that was compatible with diagnostic criteria of cluster headache. Left oculomotor nerve palsy developed 2 weeks after headache onset. Magnetic resonance imaging showed wall thickening and enhancement by contrast material in the lateral aspect of the left cavernous sinus, consistent with a possible inflammatory lesion. The patient reported the almost complete remission of the pain and diplopia after steroid therapy. We speculate that Tolosa-Hunt syndrome should be included as a cause of cluster-like headaches.
10.Acute Motor Axonal Neuropathy Accompanied with Delayed Facial Diplegia
Byeol-A YOON ; Hyein CHUNG ; Ja Hyeon CHO ; Jong Kuk KIM
Korean Journal of Neuromuscular Disorders 2021;13(2):40-43
Facial nerve palsy is one of major accompanying features in Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS). In most of the cases, facial weakness develops simultaneously with other symptoms such as motor weakness, sensory change and other cranial neuropathies. However, facial palsy also occurs after the nadir of neurological deficits or even after the beginning of limb weakness improvement, called delayed facial palsy (DFP). DFP has been reported in Miller Fisher syndrome, but it rarely found from the acute motor axonal neuropathy subtype of GBS. Recently, we experienced a patient who diagnosed acute motor axonal neuropathy accompanying with delayed facial diplegia.

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