- Dental Care Utilization for Examination and Regional Deprivation
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Cheol-Sin Kim, Sun-Young Han, Seung Eun Lee, Jeong-Hee Kang, Chul-Woung Kim
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J Prev Med Public Health. 2015;48(4):195-202. Published online July 23, 2015
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3961/jpmph.15.026
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Abstract
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- Objectives
Receiving proper dental care plays a significant role in maintaining good oral health. We investigated the relationship between regional deprivation and dental care utilization.
Methods Multilevel logistic regression was used to identify the relationship between the regional deprivation level and dental care utilization purpose, adjusting for individual-level variables, in adults aged 19+ in the 2008 Korean Community Health Survey (n=220 258).
Results Among Korean adults, 12.8% used dental care to undergo examination and 21.0% visited a dentist for other reasons. In the final model, regional deprivation level was associated with significant variations in dental care utilization for examination (p<0.001). However, this relationship was not shown with dental care utilization for other reasons in the final model.
Conclusions This study’s findings suggest that policy interventions should be considered to reduce regional variations in rates of dental care utilization for examination.
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- Utilization of dental care among adult populations: a scoping review of applied models
Ashkan Negintaji Zardak, Mostafa Amini-Rarani, Ibrahim Abdollahpour, Faezeh Eslamipour, Bahareh Tahani BMC Oral Health.2023;[Epub] CrossRef - Dental Expenditure by Household Income in Korea over the Period 2008–2017: A Review of the National Dental Insurance Reform
Hosung Shin, Han-A Cho, Bo-Ra Kim International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.2021; 18(8): 3859. CrossRef - Relationship between Subjective Oral Discomfort and Health-Related Quality of Life in the South Korean Elderly Population
Kyung-Yi Do, Sook Moon International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.2020; 17(6): 1906. CrossRef - Change over a period of 9 years in self-reported oral health of a middle-aged population using 4-6th KNHANES data
Song-Yi Kim, Nam-Hee Kim Journal of Korean Academy of Oral Health.2019; 43(2): 50. CrossRef - The role of healthcare system in dental check‐ups in 27 European countries: multilevel analysis
Shiho Kino, Eduardo Bernabé, Wael Sabbah Journal of Public Health Dentistry.2017; 77(3): 244. CrossRef - The Association Among Individual and Contextual Factors and Unmet Healthcare Needs in South Korea: A Multilevel Study Using National Data
Seung Eun Lee, Miyeon Yeon, Chul-Woung Kim, Tae-Ho Yoon Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health.2016; 49(5): 308. CrossRef - Dental care utilization in the west of Iran: a cross-sectional analysis of socioeconomic determinants
Satar Rezaei, Esmail Ghahramani, Mohammad Hajizadeh, Bijan Nouri, Sheno Bayazidi, Fatemah Khezrnezhad International Journal of Human Rights in Healthcare.2016; 9(4): 235. CrossRef
- Nurse-perceived Patient Adverse Events and Nursing Practice Environment
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Jeong-Hee Kang, Chul-Woung Kim, Sang-Yi Lee
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J Prev Med Public Health. 2014;47(5):273-280. Published online September 12, 2014
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3961/jpmph.14.019
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11,704
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145
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- Objectives
To evaluate the occurrence of patient adverse events in Korean hospitals as perceived by nurses and examine the correlation between patient adverse events with the nurse practice environment at nurse and hospital level. Methods: In total, 3096 nurses working in 60 general inpatient hospital units were included. A two-level logistic regression analysis was performed. Results: At the hospital level, patient adverse events included patient falls (60.5%), nosocomial infections (51.7%), pressure sores (42.6%) and medication errors (33.3%). Among the hospital-level explanatory variables associated with the nursing practice environment, ‘physician- nurse relationship’ correlated with medication errors while ‘education for improving quality of care’ affected patient falls. Conclusions: The doctor-nurse relationship and access to education that can improve the quality of care at the hospital level may help decrease the occurrence of patient adverse events.
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- Perceptions of Clinical Adverse Event Reporting by Nurses and Midwives
Anna Majda, Michalina Majkut, Aldona Wróbel, Anna Kurowska, Agata Wojcieszek, Kinga Kołodziej, Iwona Bodys-Cupak, Joanna Rudek, Krystian Barzykowski Healthcare.2024; 12(4): 460. CrossRef - Current situation and influencing factors of the nursing practice environment in five tertiary general hospitals in Shenzhen: a cross-sectional study
Wenjuan Lai, Rongxiu Jin, Ruoying He, Xiaorong Ding Journal of Public Health.2023; 31(2): 213. CrossRef - Surgical nurse experience with adverse events - a descriptive qualitative study
Dominika Kohanová, Soňa Baránková, Radka Kurucová, Katarína Žiaková Central European Journal of Nursing and Midwifery.2023; 14(2): 887. CrossRef - Reporting the adverse events and healthcare-associated infections in relation to the work environment
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Virya Koy, Jintana Yunibhand, Sue Turale International Nursing Review.2022; 69(1): 38. CrossRef - Spanish Version of the Scale “Eventos Adversos Associados às Práticas de Enfermagem” (EAAPE): Validation in Nursing Students
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Asal Hafezi, Atye Babaii, Bahman Aghaie, Mohammad Abbasinia BMC Nursing.2022;[Epub] CrossRef - Patient safety. Factors for and perceived consequences of nursing errors by nursing staff in home care services
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Haitham Khatatbeh, Annamária Pakai, Dorina Pusztai, Szilvia Szunomár, Noémi Fullér, Gyula Kovács Szebeni, Adrienn Siket, Miklós Zrínyi, András Oláh Nursing Open.2021; 8(2): 982. CrossRef - Supplier relationship management and organizational performance of hospitals in an emerging economy context
Stephen Oduro, Kwamena Minta Nyarku, Rotimi A. Gbadeyan Journal of Modelling in Management.2020; 15(4): 1451. CrossRef - Occurrence of hospital-acquired infections in relation to missed nursing care: a literature review
Eva Mynaříková, Darja Jarošová, Eva Janíková, Ilona Plevová, Andrea Polanská, Renáta Zeleníková Central European Journal of Nursing and Midwifery.2020; 11(1): 43. CrossRef - “It is really so exhausting”: Exploring intensive care nurses’ perceptions of 24‐hour long shifts
Virya Koy, Jintana Yunibhand, Sue Turale Journal of Clinical Nursing.2020; 29(17-18): 3506. CrossRef - A retrospective audit of nursing-related morbidity recorded in a state hospital in KwaZulu-Natal
Spumelelo P. Nyide, Petra Brysiewicz, John Bruce, Damian L. Clarke Curationis.2019;[Epub] CrossRef - Segurança e satisfação de pacientes com os cuidados de enfermeiros no perioperatório
Amalia Sillero-Sillero, Adelaida Zabalegui Revista Latino-Americana de Enfermagem.2019;[Epub] CrossRef - Rural Hospital Nursing Skill Mix and Work Environment Associated With Frequency of Adverse Events
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- Influence of the Nursing Practice Environment on Job Satisfaction and Turnover Intention
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Sang-Yi Lee, Chul-Woung Kim, Jeong-Hee Kang, Tae-Ho Yoon, Cheoul Sin Kim
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J Prev Med Public Health. 2014;47(5):258-265. Published online September 12, 2014
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3961/jpmph.14.002
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11,834
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12
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- Objectives
To examine whether the nursing practice environment at the hospital-level affects the job satisfaction and turnover intention of hospital nurses. Methods: Among the 11 731 nurses who participated in the Korea Health and Medical Workers’ Union’s educational program, 5654 responded to our survey. Data from 3096 nurses working in 185 general inpatient wards at 60 hospitals were analyzed using multilevel logistic regression modeling. Results: Having a standardized nursing process (odds ratio [OR], 4.21; p<0.001), adequate nurse staffing (OR, 4.21; p<0.01), and good doctor-nurse relationship (OR, 4.15; p<0.01), which are hospital-level variables based on the Korean General Inpatients Unit Nursing Work Index (KGU-NWI), were significantly related to nurses’ job satisfaction. However, no hospital-level variable from the KGU-NWI was significantly related to nurses’ turnover intention. Conclusions: Favorable nursing practice environments are associated with job satisfaction among nurses. In particular, having a standardized nursing process, adequate nurse staffing, and good doctor-nurse relationship were found to positively influence nurses’ job satisfaction. However, the nursing practice environment was not related to nurses’ turnover intention.
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Yun Mi Lee, Ju-Eun Song, Chanhee Park, Youn-Jung Son Evaluation & the Health Professions.2019; 42(3): 344. CrossRef - The relationship between work environment and career success among nurses with a master's or doctoral degree: A national cross‐sectional study
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