1.Study of the Residential Environment and Accessibility of Rehabilitation for Patients with Cerebral Palsy
Gyeong Hee CHO ; Chin Youb CHUNG ; Kyoung Min LEE ; Ki Hyuk SUNG ; Byung Chae CHO ; Moon Seok PARK
The Journal of the Korean Orthopaedic Association 2019;54(4):309-316
PURPOSE: This study examined the residential environment and accessibility of rehabilitation for cerebral palsy (CP) to identify the problems with residential laws pertaining to the disabled and provide basic data on the health legislation for the rights of the disabled. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The literature was searched using three keywords: residence, rehabilitation, and accessibility. Two items were selected: residential environment and rehabilitation accessibility. The questionnaire included 51 items; 24 were scored using a Likert scale and 27 were in the form of multiple-choice questions. RESULTS: This study included 100 subjects, of which 93 lived at home and seven lived in a facility. Of these 93 subjects, 65% were living in apartments, usually two or more floors above ground, and 40% of them were living without elevators. According to the Gross Motor Function Classification System, subjects with I to III belonged to the ambulatory group and IV, V were in the non-ambulatory group. Subjects from both groups who lived at home found it most difficult to visit the rehabilitation center by themselves. In contrast, among those who lived at the facility, the ambulatory group found it most difficult to leave the facility alone, while the non-ambulatory group found it most difficult to use the toilet alone. Moreover, 83% of respondents thought that rehabilitation was necessary for CP. On the other hand, 33% are receiving rehabilitation services. Rehabilitation was performed for an average of 3.6 sessions per week, 39 minutes per session. CONCLUSION: There is no law that ensures secure and convenient access of CP to higher levels. Laws on access routes to enter rooms are insufficient. The disabled people's law and the disabled person's health law will be implemented in December 2017. It is necessary to enact laws that actually reflect the difficulties of people with disabilities. Based on the results of this study, an investigation of the housing and rehabilitation of patients with CP through a large-scale questionnaire will necessary.
Cerebral Palsy
;
Classification
;
Disabled Persons
;
Elevators and Escalators
;
Hand
;
Housing
;
Humans
;
Jurisprudence
;
Legislation as Topic
;
Rehabilitation Centers
;
Rehabilitation
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
2.Current Status and the Future of Occupational Safety and Health Legislation in Low- and Middle-Income Countries.
Safety and Health at Work 2018;9(4):365-371
This article addresses three key issues. First, the commonalities, differences, strengths, and limitations of existing occupational safety and health (OSH) legislation of low- and middle-income countries were determined. Second, required revisions were identified and discussed to strengthen the laws in accordance with the best international practice. Finally, proposals for additional OSH laws and interventions were suggested. A literature search of OSH laws of 10 selected low- and middle-income countries was carried out. The laws were subjected to uniform review criteria. Although the agricultural sector employs more than 70% of the population, most of the reviewed countries lack OSH legislation on the sector. Existing OSH laws are gender insensitive, fragmented among various government departments, insufficient, outdated, and nondeterrent to perpetrators and lack incentives for compliance. Conclusively, the legal frameworks require reformation and harmonization for the collective benefit to employees, employers, and regulatory authorities. New OSH legislation for the agricultural sector is required.
Clothing
;
Compliance
;
Jurisprudence
;
Legislation as Topic*
;
Motivation
;
Occupational Health*
3.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
;
Humans
;
Hygiene*
;
Institutionalization*
;
Japan
;
Jurisprudence
;
Korea
;
Legislation as Topic
;
Military Personnel
;
Punishment
;
Sanitation
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Shock
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Social Control, Formal
4.Advances of Hospice Palliative Care in Taiwan.
Shao Yi CHENG ; Ching Yu CHEN ; Tai Yuan CHIU
Korean Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care 2016;19(4):292-295
Hospice and palliative care in Taiwan has been growing continuously. The 2015 Quality of Death index, as rated by the Economist Intelligence Unit, ranked Taiwan first among Asian countries and sixth in the world. In this review article, we highlight three particular areas that might have contributed to this success; the laws and regulations, spiritual care and research network. Finally, we discuss the future challenges and prospects for Taiwanese encounters. A systemic review was conducted with the keywords “hospice palliative care Taiwan” using PubMed. The passing of the “Natural Death Act” in 2000 set the example and established a landmark for patient autonomy in Asia; it guarantees the patient's right to request that medical staff do not resuscitate (DNR) them and to reject other futile medical treatments at the end of their life, thus reflecting the importance of palliative care from the policy perspective. In 2015, Taiwan passed another pioneering law entitled the “Patient Autonomy Act”. This law states that a patient may decline medical treatment according to his/her own will. Taiwanese indigenous spiritual care was launched in 2000. It requires a Buddhist Chaplain to successfully complete a training program consisting of lectures, as well as bedside practicum before applying Buddhist practices to end-of-life care. The Japan-Korea-Taiwan research network was established for the purpose of enabling collaborative research for the East-Asian collaborative cross-cultural Study to Elucidate the Dying process (EASED) cohort. With consensus from the government and society to make it a priority, hospice and palliative medicine in Taiwan has been growing steadily.
Asia
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Asian Continental Ancestry Group
;
Clergy
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Cohort Studies
;
Consensus
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Education
;
Hospice Care
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Hospices*
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Humans
;
Intelligence
;
Jurisprudence
;
Lectures
;
Legislation as Topic
;
Medical Staff
;
Palliative Care*
;
Palliative Medicine
;
Patient Rights
;
Social Control, Formal
;
Taiwan*
5.Distancing sedation in end-of-life care from physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia.
Tze Ling Gwendoline Beatrice SOH ; Lalit Kumar Radha KRISHNA ; Shin Wei SIM ; Alethea Chung Peng YEE
Singapore medical journal 2016;57(5):220-227
Lipuma equates continuous sedation until death (CSD) to physician-assisted suicide/euthanasia (PAS/E) based on the premise that iatrogenic unconsciousness negates social function and, thus, personhood, leaving a patient effectively 'dead'. Others have extrapolated upon this position further, to suggest that any use of sedation and/or opioids at the end of life would be analogous to CSD and thus tantamount to PAS/E. These posits sit diametrically opposite to standard end-of-life care practices. This paper will refute Lipuma's position and the posits borne from it. We first show that prevailing end-of-life care guidelines require proportional and monitored use of sedatives and/or opioids to attenuate fears that the use of such treatment could hasten death. These guidelines also classify CSD as a last resort treatment, employed only when symptoms prove intractable, and not amenable to all standard treatment options. Furthermore, CSD is applied only when deemed appropriate by a multidisciplinary palliative medicine team. We also show that empirical data based on local views of personhood will discount concerns that iatrogenic unconsciousness is tantamount to a loss of personhood and death.
Analgesics, Opioid
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therapeutic use
;
Attitude of Health Personnel
;
Death
;
Deep Sedation
;
ethics
;
Ethics, Medical
;
Euthanasia
;
ethics
;
legislation & jurisprudence
;
Humans
;
Hypnotics and Sedatives
;
therapeutic use
;
Palliative Care
;
ethics
;
Personhood
;
Philosophy, Medical
;
Practice Guidelines as Topic
;
Suicide, Assisted
;
ethics
;
legislation & jurisprudence
;
Terminal Care
;
ethics
;
Unconsciousness
6.Analysis and discussion on current condition of acupuncture clinical research registration.
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2015;35(6):605-607
To introduce the international registration condition of acupuncture clinical research. With the examples of World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform and the U. S. National Institutes of Health Clinical Registration Platform, the registration method and current condition of acupuncture clinical trials in international clinical trials registration platform were analyzed. The results indicate that the number of acupuncture clinical trials registration is gradually increased and the registration number from China is on the rise as well. But most domestic acupuncture clinical researches haven't been registered arid the researchers' valuing degree for clinical trials registration and methodology research needs to be improved.
Acupuncture Therapy
;
standards
;
Biomedical Research
;
legislation & jurisprudence
;
standards
;
Clinical Trials as Topic
;
legislation & jurisprudence
;
standards
;
Humans
;
Registries
7.INDENA SPA company's patent portfolio of Ginkgo biloba preparation.
Nan WANG ; Kai GUO ; Xin-min CHENG ; Wei LIU
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2015;40(19):3889-3893
INDENA SPA Company in Italy is a multi-national company that produces and sells plant extracts. Based on its own re- search advantages in the field of Ginkgo biloba preparation, the company protects its own products market effectively through building patent portfolio around the patents of its opponent. Based on the multi-angle analysis for patent portfolio of G. biloba preparation from the aspects of application time, legal status, technical development route, and patent portfolio layout, this article provides technical reference on research and development of G. biloba preparation, and the author suggest that Chinese applicants learn techniques and layout experiences of other patents fully to enhance the level of research and patent protection level.
Chemistry, Pharmaceutical
;
economics
;
legislation & jurisprudence
;
Ginkgo biloba
;
chemistry
;
Italy
;
Patents as Topic
;
Plant Extracts
;
chemistry
;
economics
;
isolation & purification
8.A Scopus-Based Analysis of Publication Activity in Kazakhstan from 2010 to 2015: Positive Trends, Concerns, and Possible Solutions.
Marlen YESSIRKEPOV ; Bekaidar NURMASHEV ; Mariya ANARTAYEVA
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2015;30(12):1915-1919
The article analyzes the publication activity of scientific authors from Kazakhstan based on Scopus and SCImago Journal & Country Rank data from 2010 to 2015. The number of indexed multidisciplinary and medical articles from the country has been steadily growing from 2011 onward and this can be due to the adoption of the new Law on Science in that year. Several regulatory legal acts have been issued in recent years aimed at improving the quality of local journals and the international recognition of academic degrees and titles. Publication activity of scientific authors from Kazakhstan was found to be higher than that from other countries in the Central Asian region. However, there are still many unresolved issues related to the English language barrier, lack of indexing status of local journals, and poor topical education on science writing and editing. As such, the number of articles published in 'predatory' journals remains sizable, and there are concerns over authors' negligence and plagiarism. The global solution to the discussed problems may be achieved by educating researchers, authors, reviewers, and editors.
Bibliometrics
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Humans
;
Kazakhstan
;
Language
;
Periodicals as Topic
;
Publications/ethics/legislation & jurisprudence/*trends
;
Publishing/trends
;
Scientific Misconduct
9.Current status and future prospects of acupuncture and traditional Chinese medicine in Canada.
Chinese journal of integrative medicine 2015;21(3):166-172
Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) and acupuncture has been gradually accepted by the mainstream society since the 1970s and has been rapidly expanding, accompanying the tide of Chinese immigration since the 1980s. Acupuncture legislation has been approved by the governments of 5 provinces in Canada between 1988 and 2014. After the acceptance of self-regulation, 5 corresponding colleges were established, one after another. The code of ethics and professional practice standard were developed by the Colleges. British Columbia (BC) became the first Canadian province to offer acupuncture treatments as a supplementary benefit for its Medical Services Plan premium assistance recipients beginning in 2008. The 5 colleges united to form the Canadian Alliance of Regulatory Bodies of Traditional Chinese Medicine Practitioners and Acupuncturists (CARBTCMPA) in the same year. The Entry-level Occupational Competencies for the Practice of TCM in Canada were developed by CARB-TCMPA in 2010. The Pan-Canadian registration examinations for acupuncturists, herbalists and TCM practitioners have been administered and scheduled since 2013. The Entry-level Occupational Competencies for Doctors of TCM were developed by College of Traditional Chinese Medicine Practitioners and Acupuncturists of British Columbia (CTCMA-BC) in 2014. It sketches the blueprint for future development of the TCM profession in Canada.
Acupuncture Therapy
;
trends
;
Canada
;
Education, Medical
;
Humans
;
Legislation as Topic
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
;
trends
10.Establish research model of post-marketing clinical safety evaluation for Chinese patent medicine.
Wen-ke ZHENG ; Zhi LIU ; Xiang LEI ; Ran TIAN ; Rui ZHENG ; Nan LI ; Jing-tian REN ; Xiao-xi DU ; Hong-cai SHANG
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2015;40(18):3693-3696
The safety of Chinese patent medicine has become a focus of social. It is necessary to carry out work on post-marketing clinical safety evaluation for Chinese patent medicine. However, there have no criterions to guide the related research, it is urgent to set up a model and method to guide the practice for related research. According to a series of clinical research, we put forward some views, which contained clear and definite the objective and content of clinical safety evaluation, the work flow should be determined, make a list of items for safety evaluation project, and put forward the three level classification of risk control. We set up a model of post-marketing clinical safety evaluation for Chinese patent medicine. Based this model, the list of items can be used for ranking medicine risks, and then take steps for different risks, aims to lower the app:ds:risksrisk level. At last, the medicine can be managed by five steps in sequence. The five steps are, collect risk signal, risk recognition, risk assessment, risk management, and aftereffect assessment. We hope to provide new ideas for the future research.
Clinical Trials as Topic
;
Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions
;
epidemiology
;
etiology
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal
;
adverse effects
;
chemistry
;
economics
;
therapeutic use
;
Herbal Medicine
;
economics
;
legislation & jurisprudence
;
Humans
;
Patents as Topic
;
Product Surveillance, Postmarketing
;
Quality Control

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