1.Establishing adult vaccination system to improve the quality of immunization services over the life course.
Juan LI ; Yan Lin CAO ; Luo Dan SUO ; Jiang WU ; Lu Zhao FENG
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2023;57(12):2016-2020
The scientific setting and standardized management of adult vaccination clinics will improve the accessibility of vaccination services, thereby increasing the vaccination rate. Currently, some provinces and cities in China have been exploring the construction of adult vaccination systems for many years, effectively improving the level of vaccination services, and forming some useful experiences and models. However, the construction of China's adult vaccination system is not yet perfect, and the service mode needs to be optimized. In the future, we should continue to improve the guarantee measures for adult vaccination, scientifically lay out the network, optimize the service mode, and improve the overall quality of immunization services over the life course.
Adult
;
Humans
;
Life Change Events
;
Immunization
;
Vaccination
;
China
;
Cities
2.Establishing adult vaccination system to improve the quality of immunization services over the life course.
Juan LI ; Yan Lin CAO ; Luo Dan SUO ; Jiang WU ; Lu Zhao FENG
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2023;57(12):2016-2020
The scientific setting and standardized management of adult vaccination clinics will improve the accessibility of vaccination services, thereby increasing the vaccination rate. Currently, some provinces and cities in China have been exploring the construction of adult vaccination systems for many years, effectively improving the level of vaccination services, and forming some useful experiences and models. However, the construction of China's adult vaccination system is not yet perfect, and the service mode needs to be optimized. In the future, we should continue to improve the guarantee measures for adult vaccination, scientifically lay out the network, optimize the service mode, and improve the overall quality of immunization services over the life course.
Adult
;
Humans
;
Life Change Events
;
Immunization
;
Vaccination
;
China
;
Cities
3.Associations of negative life events and coping styles with sleep quality among Chinese adolescents: a cross-sectional study.
Zheng REN ; Xiumin ZHANG ; Yue SHEN ; Xiangrong LI ; Minfu HE ; Hong SHI ; Hanfang ZHAO ; Shuang ZHA ; Shuyin QIAO ; Yuyu LI ; Yajiao PU ; Xinwen FAN ; Xia GUO ; Hongjian LIU
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2021;26(1):85-85
BACKGROUND:
Limited published research has examined the relationships of negative life events and coping styles with sleep quality in Chinese junior high school students. We aimed to investigate the prevalence of poor sleep quality and to clarify the role of coping styles between negative life events and sleep quality.
METHODS:
A cross-sectional study of 3081 students was conducted in Ganzhou City, Jiangxi Province, Southeastern China. Adolescent Self-Rating Life Events Checklist, Simplified Coping Style Questionnaire, and Pittsburg Sleep Quality Index were applied to assess negative life events, coping styles, and sleep quality, respectively. Descriptive analyses, independent-samples t tests, one-way analyses of variance, Pearson correlation analyses, and structural equation modeling (SEM) were applied to analyze the data.
RESULTS:
The prevalence of poor sleep quality was 26.7%. Negative life events (B = 0.038, P < 0.001) and negative coping style (B = 0.049, P < 0.001) demonstrated a positive association with poor sleep quality, while positive coping style indicated a negative association with poor sleep quality (B = -0.029, P < 0.001). Interactions of negative life events and coping styles with sleep quality were not found (all P > 0.05). The association between negative life events and sleep quality was mediated by negative coping styles.
CONCLUSIONS
Our results indicated that poor sleep quality was common in these Chinese adolescents. Negative life events and negative coping style were associated with an increased prevalence of poor sleep quality, while the positive coping style was related to a decreased prevalence of poor sleep quality. A negative coping style mediated the association between negative life events and sleep quality.
Adaptation, Psychological
;
Adolescent
;
Child
;
China
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Humans
;
Life Change Events
;
Psychology, Adolescent
;
Psychology, Child
;
Sleep
4.Influence of Work Characteristics on the Association Between Police Stress and Sleep Quality
Claudia C MA ; Tara A HARTLEY ; Khachatur SARKISIAN ; Desta FEKEDULEGN ; Anna MNATSAKANOVA ; Sherry OWENS ; Ja Kook GU ; Cathy TINNEY-ZARA ; John M VIOLANTI ; Michael E ANDREW
Safety and Health at Work 2019;10(1):30-38
BACKGROUND: Police officers' stress perception, frequency of stressful events (stressors), and police work characteristics may contribute to poor sleep quality through different mechanisms. METHODS: We investigated associations of stress severity (measured by stress rating score) and frequency of stressors with sleep quality and examined the influence of police work characteristics including workload, police rank, prior military experience, and shift work on the associations. Participants were 356 police officers (256 men and 100 women) enrolled in the Buffalo Cardio-Metabolic Occupational Police Stress Study from 2004 to 2009. A mean stress rating score and mean frequency of stressors occurring in the past month were computed for each participant from the Spielberger Police Stress Survey data. Sleep quality was assessed using the global score derived from the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index survey. Linear associations of the stress rating score and frequency of stressors with sleep quality (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index global score) were tested. Age, sex, race/ethnicity, and smoking status were selected as potential confounders. RESULTS: The stress rating score was positively and independently associated with poor sleep quality (β = 0.17, p = 0.002). Only workload significantly modified this association (β = 0.23, p = 0.001 for high workload group; p-interaction = 0.109). The frequency of stressors was positively and independently associated with poor sleep quality (β = 0.13, p = 0.025). Only police rank significantly modified the association (β = 0.007, p = 0.004 for detectives/other executives; p-interaction = 0.076). CONCLUSION: Both police officers' perception of stress severity and the frequency of stressors are associated with poor sleep quality. Stress coping or sleep promotion regimens may be more beneficial among police officers reporting high workloads.
Buffaloes
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Humans
;
Life Change Events
;
Male
;
Military Personnel
;
Police
;
Smoke
;
Smoking
5.Nursing College Life Experiences of North Korean Defectors
Jung Suk PARK ; Eun Joo JO ; Eun Joung CHOI ; Hyun Mee CHO ; Ji Hyun BAE
Journal of Korean Academy of Community Health Nursing 2019;30(3):324-335
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to understand nursing college life experiences of North Korean Defectors and identify their meanings. METHODS: The study collected data through individual in-depth interviews among six undergraduates or graduates from nursing colleges, using phenomenological research methodology of Colaizzi-one of qualitative research approaches. RESULTS: Six categories drawn as a result of research include ‘Be bumped against hard reality wall’, ‘Bondage of discrimination and prejudice’, ‘Endure and stand with strength of faith’, ‘Myself grown up along with work’, ‘Becoming one amid differences’, and ‘Stepping towards unification’. CONCLUSION: The result of this study would contribute to understanding academic and interpersonal difficulties North Korean defectors might experience at nursing colleges. And it may also help people to learn that they would play an important role in integration of the nursing fields of South and North Korea as well as the nation's unification. Along the way, the results of the study could be basic data to establish national policy helping North Korean defectors adapt to nursing college life, and develop the supporting system of colleges as well as setting up appropriate supports and measures from the perspective of the nursing field.
Democratic People's Republic of Korea
;
Discrimination (Psychology)
;
Life Change Events
;
Nursing
;
Qualitative Research
;
Research Design
6.Partnership Between Families of Children with Muscular Dystrophy and Health-care Professionals: From Parents' Perspective.
Bao Huan YANG ; Chia Ying CHUNG ; Yuh Shiow LI
Asian Nursing Research 2018;12(2):127-135
PURPOSE: At present, there is still controversy between parents of children with muscular dystrophy (MD) and health-care professionals on care issues. Partnerships can connect the affected children and their families to appropriate health-care services, to jointly face the care environment together and thereby improve the quality of life of children with MD. Therefore, the objective of this study was to explore partnerships between families and health-care professionals from the perspectives of parents of children with MD. METHODS: Husserl's phenomenological research was applied to explore the basic structures of parents' descriptions of MD. Through purposive sampling, we conducted in-depth interviews with parents, and analyzed the data according to the theory of Giorgi. Nineteen parents (10 mothers, 9 fathers) participated in this study. The precision of the research results was tested by applying the four standards of Lincoln and Guba. RESULTS: This study identified five constituents: feasible resources and detailed care information; the provision of an integrated medical care across systems; family and home as key elements in critical care; respect and care for family care demands; and finally, feedback and support from families. CONCLUSION: This study demonstrated that partnerships were established by health-care professionals, enhancing the care capacity of the families, developing the preventive medicine of MD, and enhancing children's potential for self-care within the families. Hospital policies should include the promotion of family partnership care. The findings can help health-care professionals recognize the life experiences of children with MD when providing medical care.
Child*
;
Critical Care
;
Humans
;
Life Change Events
;
Mothers
;
Muscular Dystrophies*
;
Parents
;
Partnership Practice
;
Preventive Medicine
;
Quality of Life
;
Self Care
7.Experience of Conflict in Three Shift Nurses Rearing more than Two Kids: Phenomenological Study.
Jeung Im KIM ; Jeong Won YEOM ; Sun Kyung PARK ; Hyun Hee JEONG ; Uhm Joo MIN ; Sun Hwa PARK ; Jung Mi LEE ; Young Sun YEOM
Korean Journal of Women Health Nursing 2018;24(3):252-264
PURPOSE: To understand the essentials of rearing conflict experience by three shift nurses in advanced general hospitals. METHODS: The design was a qualitative research of phenomenology. Participants were 7 shift nurses working in advanced general hospitals who were rearing young children. Data were collected individually through in-depth interview on their life experiences. Data were analyzed by Colaizzi's phenomenological methodology. RESULTS: Eighteen themes were drawn from 256 meaningful experiences and these themes were integrated to six theme clusters. The most influencing themes were ‘Regret that I cannot satisfy even the slightest wish’, ‘Fail to care for kids’, and ‘Mutual feeling to care giver between appreciation and inconvenience’. Other themes were as follows: ‘Body and mind are broken’, ‘The need for a three-shift system to support nurses who are rearing children’, ‘Doing my best for work and child rearing’. CONCLUSION: The nature of three-shift nurses working in advanced hospital and caring kids is explained as ‘lives with conflict’ between work and home. This study suggests it is necessary to establish a 24-hour care center for 3-shift nurses to keep working while rearing their children.
Caregivers
;
Child
;
Hospitals, General
;
Humans
;
Life Change Events
;
Qualitative Research
8.Clinical Features of Benign Essential Blepharospasm in Korean Patients.
Jeong Min LEE ; Ji Sun BAEK ; Hye Sun CHOI ; Sung Joo KIM ; Jae Woo JANG
Korean Journal of Ophthalmology 2018;32(5):339-343
PURPOSE: To analyze the clinical features of benign essential blepharospasm in Korean patients. METHODS: Patients diagnosed with benign essential blepharospasm in Kim's Eye Hospital from November 2014 to December 2016 were evaluated using a clinical examination and questionnaire. The questionnaire reviewed personal medical history, demographic factors, risk factors for blepharospasm development, and relieving and aggravating factors. RESULTS: Of the 101 patients enrolled, 78 (77.2%) were women. The mean age was 64.9 years old. Hypertension was the most common medical disorder (42.6%), followed by diabetes mellitus. The majority of the patients were non-smokers (83.2%) and drank less than a cup of a caffeinated beverage a day (30.7%). Fifty-seven percent of patients reported no stressful events immediately prior to symptom development. Fatigue and stress were aggravating factors in more than 55% of patients; rest was the most common relieving factor (35.6%). CONCLUSIONS: Here, we report the clinical features of benign essential blepharospasm in Korean patients for the first time. The results were consistent with previous reports showing that the majority of benign essential blepharospasm patients are women and non-smokers. In contrast to previous reports though, fatigue and stress were aggravating factors, and the most common relieving factor was rest. No stressful events had immediately preceded the development of blepharospasm in 57.4% of patients. This report may aid in treating and counseling patients with benign essential blepharospasm.
Beverages
;
Blepharospasm*
;
Counseling
;
Demography
;
Diabetes Mellitus
;
Fatigue
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Hypertension
;
Life Change Events
;
Risk Factors
;
Smoking
9.School Life Experience of Male Nursing Students Reinstated at School after Military Service.
Kyoung A NAM ; Kyeong Hwa KANG ; Seongmi MOON
Journal of Korean Academic Society of Nursing Education 2018;24(4):315-325
PURPOSE: This study aimed to explore and describe the school life experience of male nursing students reinstated at school after military service. METHODS: The participants in the current study were 20 male nursing students from three universities. The data were collected in focus group interviews, and an inductive content analysis was performed on the data obtained from six focus groups. RESULTS: The content relating to the school experience of the participants was categorized into four themes: making a new start, facing challenges, trying to find one's place, and confusion about one's professional identity. CONCLUSION: Nursing education in Korea needs to be reconsidered, as it adheres to a gender-stereotyped identity. This study provides implications for improving the content and quality of nursing education.
Education, Nursing
;
Focus Groups
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Life Change Events*
;
Male*
;
Military Personnel*
;
Nurses, Male
;
Nursing*
;
Students, Nursing*
10.Relationship between Personality and Biological Reactivity to Stress: A Review.
Omid SOLIEMANIFAR ; Arman SOLEYMANIFAR ; Reza AFRISHAM
Psychiatry Investigation 2018;15(12):1100-1114
OBJECTIVE: Personality traits can be the basis for individual differences in the biological response of stress. To date, many psychobiological studies have been conducted to clarify the relationship between personality and biological reactivity to stress. This review summarizes the most important findings in this area of research. RESULTS: Key findings related to the relationship between personality factors and stress-sensitive biological systems in four research models have been summarized; model of psychosocial characteristics, model based on Rumination and Emotional Inhibition, Eysenck’s biopsychological model, and Five-Factor Approach of Personality. CONCLUSION: According to the results of this review, it can be concluded that personality typology of individuals influenced their biological reactivity to stressful events. Understanding the biological basis of personality can help to better understand vulnerability to stress. Future research can be continuing based on framework of the four models.
alpha-Amylases
;
Biomarkers
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Hydrocortisone
;
Immunoglobulin A
;
Individuality
;
Life Change Events
;
Stress, Psychological

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