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Mankyu Choi 3 Articles
Factors Related to Perceived Life Satisfaction Among the Elderly in South Korea.
Minsoo Jung, Carles Muntaner, Mankyu Choi
J Prev Med Public Health. 2010;43(4):292-300.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3961/jpmph.2010.43.4.292
  • 5,611 View
  • 85 Download
  • 20 Crossref
AbstractAbstract PDF
OBJECTIVES
This study attempted to explore the aging phenomena that now characterize much of Korean society, and assessed issues associated with the life satisfaction experienced during the process of aging. METHODS: By employing the National Survey on the State of Life and the Desire for Welfare of the Elderly, 2004 in South Korea this study attempted to identify the factors that determine subjective life satisfaction among the elderly. The data utilized herein consisted of 3278 elderly people aged 65 years or older, from 9308 households. RESULTS: The results of analysis from the final model after the introduction of 19 variables in 8 factors showed statistically similar explanatory power in men (adj. R2=0.320) and in women (adj. R2=0.346). We found that economic condition was the most influential factor in both men (B=0.278) and women (B=0.336) except perceived health condition variables. The second most influential variable in life satisfaction was health checkups in men (B=0.128) and degree of nutritional diet in women (B=0.145). Those who had experience with chronic diseases also reported significantly lower perceived life satisfaction and this was particularly true of women. CONCLUSIONS: The aging society requires an understanding of the lives of elderly individuals. This study explored factors associated with life satisfaction in old age by using a life satisfaction model. The success of an aging society begins with an accurate understanding of the elderly, and thus political attention will need to be focused on this matter.
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  • Living arrangement of Indian elderly: a predominant predictor of their level of life satisfaction
    Binayak Kandapan, Jalandhar Pradhan, Itishree Pradhan
    BMC Geriatrics.2023;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Older Adults’ Advance Aging and Life Satisfaction Levels: Effects of Lifestyles and Health Capabilities
    Dongwook Cho, Wookwang Cheon
    Behavioral Sciences.2023; 13(4): 293.     CrossRef
  • Functional disability and its associated factors among the elderly in rural India using LASI Wave 1 data
    Manik Halder, Jay Saha, Avijit Roy, Doli Roy, Pradip Chouhan
    Journal of Public Health.2023;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • An assessment of self-rated life satisfaction and its correlates with physical, mental and social health status among older adults in India
    Mahadev Bramhankar, Sampurna Kundu, Mohit Pandey, Nand Lal Mishra, Adarsh Adarsh
    Scientific Reports.2023;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Trade Unions and Workers’ Life Satisfaction in South Korea
    Yong-Woo Lee
    Applied Research in Quality of Life.2022; 17(1): 277.     CrossRef
  • The effects of health insurance and physical exercise participation on life satisfaction of older people in China—Based on CHNS panel data from 2006 to 2015
    Lin Luo, Xiaojin Zeng, Xiangfei Wang
    Frontiers in Public Health.2022;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Satisfaction with life and associated factors among elderly people living in two cities in northwest Ethiopia: a community-based cross-sectional study
    Habtamu Sewunet Mekonnen, Helena Lindgren, Biftu Geda, Telake Azale, Kerstin Erlandsson
    BMJ Open.2022; 12(9): e061931.     CrossRef
  • Influence of healthy lifestyle behaviors on life satisfaction in the aging population of Thailand: a national population-based survey
    Sirinya Phulkerd, Sasinee Thapsuwan, Aphichat Chamratrithirong, Rossarin Soottipong Gray
    BMC Public Health.2021;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Functional Capacity and Life Satisfaction in Older Adult Residents Living in Long-Term Care Facilities: The Mediator of Autonomy
    Li-Hsing LIU, Chia-Chan KAO, Jeremy C. YING
    Journal of Nursing Research.2020; 28(4): e102.     CrossRef
  • The Association between the Perception of Aging and Functional Independence in the Elderly Patients with Type II Diabetes Mellitus
    F Bastani, P Beigi Boroujeni
    Iran Journal of Nursing.2019; 32(117): 7.     CrossRef
  • Frequency and Pattern of Contact with Multiple Children and Subjective Well-Being in Middle and Later Life
    Heejeong Choi, Boram Nam
    Journal of Korean Home Management Association.2019; 37(4): 27.     CrossRef
  • Patterns in quality of life according to employment among the older adults: the Korean longitudinal study of aging (2008–2014)
    Deulle Min, Eunhee Cho
    BMC Public Health.2018;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • The Association Between Filial Discrepancy and Depressive Symptoms: Findings From a Community-Dwelling Chinese Aging Population
    Xinqi Dong, Mengting Li, Yingxiao Hua
    The Journals of Gerontology: Series A.2017; 72(suppl_1): S63.     CrossRef
  • Factors determining the use of social support services among elderly people living in a city environment in Poland
    Monika Burzynska, Marek Bryla, Pawel Bryla, Irena Maniecka-Bryla
    Health & Social Care in the Community.2016; 24(6): 758.     CrossRef
  • Old, down and out? Appearance, body work and positive ageing among elderly South Korean women
    Joanna Elfving-Hwang
    Journal of Aging Studies.2016; 38: 6.     CrossRef
  • Common chronic health problems and life satisfaction among Macau elderly people
    Sydney X.X. Hu, Wai In Lei, Ka Kei Chao, Brian J. Hall, Siu Fung Chung
    International Journal of Nursing Sciences.2016; 3(4): 367.     CrossRef
  • Urban and rural factors associated with life satisfaction among older Chinese adults
    Chengbo Li, Iris Chi, Xu Zhang, Zhaowen Cheng, Lei Zhang, Gong Chen
    Aging & Mental Health.2015; 19(10): 947.     CrossRef
  • Factors associated with the life satisfaction amongst the rural elderly in Odisha, India
    Pallavi Banjare, Rinshu Dwivedi, Jalandhar Pradhan
    Health and Quality of Life Outcomes.2015;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Education, Functional Limitations, and Life Satisfaction Among Older Adults in South Korea
    Eun-Kyoung Othelia Lee, Jungui Lee
    Educational Gerontology.2013; 39(7): 514.     CrossRef
  • Life satisfaction and mortality in elderly people: The Kangwha Cohort Study
    Heejin Kimm, Jae Woong Sull, Bayasgalan Gombojav, Sang-Wook Yi, Heechoul Ohrr
    BMC Public Health.2012;[Epub]     CrossRef
Perceived Service Quality among Outpatients Visiting Hospitals and Clinics and Their Willingness to Re-utilize the Same Medical Institutions.
Minsoo Jung, Keon Hyung Lee, Mankyu Choi
J Prev Med Public Health. 2009;42(3):151-159.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3961/jpmph.2009.42.3.151
  • 4,907 View
  • 81 Download
  • 10 Crossref
AbstractAbstract PDF
OBJECTIVES
This study was to determine how the perception and the satisfaction of outpatients who utilized clinics and hospitals are structurally related with their willingness to utilize the same institution in the future. METHODS: Three hundred and ten responses (via convenient sampling) were collected from 5 hospitals and 20 clinics located in Seoul listed in the "Korea National Hospital Directory 2005". Service quality was utilized as the satisfaction measurement tool. For analysis, we used a structural equation modeling method. RESULTS: The determining factors for general satisfaction with medical services are as follows: medical staff, reasonability of payment, comfort and accessibility. Such results may involve increased competition in the medical market and increased demands for quality medical services, which drive the patients to visit hospitals on their own on the basis of changed determining factors for satisfaction. CONCLUSIONS: The structural equation model showed that the satisfaction of outpatients with the quality of medical services is influenced by a few sub-dimensional satisfaction factors. Among these sub-dimensional satisfaction factors, the satisfaction with medical staff and payment were determined to exert a significant effect on overall satisfaction with the quality of medical services. The structural relationship in which overall satisfaction perceived by patients significantly influences their willingness to use the same institution in the future was also verified.
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Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Factors associated with the download and use of mobile personal health record applications in Korean hospitals
    Hyeon Seok Kim, Dahye Lee, Kee Nyun Kim, Sang Mi Kim, Young-Taek Park
    Health Informatics Journal.2023;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Factors Associated with Website Operation among Small Hospitals and Medical and Dental Clinics in Korea
    Young-Taek Park, Young Jae Kim, Kwang Gi Kim
    Healthcare Informatics Research.2022; 28(4): 355.     CrossRef
  • Patient satisfaction and loyalty to the healthcare organization
    Thi Le Ha Nguyen, Keisuke Nagase
    International Journal of Pharmaceutical and Healthcare Marketing.2021; 15(4): 496.     CrossRef
  • Factors of quality of care and their association with smartphone based PHR adoption in South Korean hospitals
    Byung Kwan Choi, Young-Taek Park, Hyeoun-Ae Park, Chris Lane, Emmanuel C. Jo, Sunghong Kang
    BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making.2021;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • The effect of patient satisfaction with academic hospitals on their loyalty
    Mina Rostami, Leila Ahmadian, Yunes Jahani, Aliakbar Niknafs
    The International Journal of Health Planning and Management.2019;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Association between Types of Usual Source of Care and User Perception of Overall Health Care Service Quality in Korea
    Nak-Jin Sung, Jae-Ho Lee
    Korean Journal of Family Medicine.2019; 40(3): 143.     CrossRef
  • Assessment of patients’ satisfaction and associated factors among outpatients received mental health services at public hospitals of Mekelle Town, northern Ethiopia
    Haftom Desta, Tesfay Berhe, Solomon Hintsa
    International Journal of Mental Health Systems.2018;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Analysis of Appropriate Outpatient Consultation Time for Clinical Departments
    Chan Hee Lee, Hyunsun Lim, Youngnam Kim, Ai Hee Park, Eun-Cheol Park, Jung-Gu Kang
    Health Policy and Management.2014; 24(3): 254.     CrossRef
  • Positioning Patient-Perceived Medical Services to Develop a Marketing Strategy
    Minsoo Jung, Myung-Sun Hong
    The Health Care Manager.2012; 31(1): 52.     CrossRef
  • Analysis of the Factors Related to the Needs of Patients with Cancer
    Jung-A Lee, Sun-Hee Lee, Jong-Hyock Park, Jae-Hyun Park, Sung-Gyeong Kim, Ju-Hyun Seo
    Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health.2010; 43(3): 222.     CrossRef
Keywords Network Analysis of Articles in the North Korean Journal of Preventive Medicine 1997~2006.
Minsoo Jung, Dongjun Chung, Mankyu Choi
J Prev Med Public Health. 2008;41(6):365-372.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3961/jpmph.2008.41.6.365
  • 5,080 View
  • 102 Download
  • 6 Crossref
AbstractAbstract PDF
OBJECTIVES
There are very few researches on North Korea's academic activities. Furthermore, it is doubtful that the available data are reliable. This study investigated research activities and knowledge structure in the field of Preventive Medicine in North Korea with a network analysis using co-authors and keywords. METHODS: The data was composed of the North Korean Journal of preventive medicine ranged from Vol. 1 of 1997 to Vol. 4 of 2006. It was the matrix of 1,172 articles by 1,567 co-authors. We applied R procedure for keywords abstraction, and then sought for the outcome of network forms by spring-KK and shrinking network. RESULTS: To comprehend the whole networks explicitly demonstrated that the academic activities in North Korea's preventive medicine were predisposed to centralization as similar as South Korea's, but on the other aspect they were prone to one-off intermittent segmentation. The principal co-author networks were formulated around some outstanding medical universities seemingly in addition to possible intervention by major researchers. The knowledge structure of network was based on experimentation judging from keywords such as drug, immunity, virus detection, infection, bacteria, anti-inflammation, etc. CONCLUSIONS: Though North Korea is a socialist regime, there were network of academic activities, which were deemed the existence of inducive mechanism affordable for free research. Article keywords has laid greater emphasis on experiment-based bacterial detection, sustainable immune system and prevention of infection. The kind of trend was a consistent characteristic in preventive medicine of North Korea having close correlation with Koryo medical science.
Summary

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Frequently covered diseases in North Korean internal medicine journal Internal Medicine [Naegwa]—Secondary publication
    Shin Ha, Yo Han Lee
    Science Editing.2019; 6(2): 99.     CrossRef
  • Systematic review of evidence on public health in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea
    John J Park, Ah-Young Lim, Hyung-Soon Ahn, Andrew I Kim, Soyoung Choi, David HW Oh, Owen Lee-Park, Sharon Y Kim, Sun Jae Jung, Jesse B Bump, Rifat Atun, Hee Young Shin, Kee B Park
    BMJ Global Health.2019; 4(2): e001133.     CrossRef
  • An Analysis of Infectious Disease Research Trends in Medical Journals From North Korea
    Do-Hyeon Park, Min-Ho Choi, Ah-Young Lim, Hee Young Shin
    Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health.2018; 51(2): 109.     CrossRef
  • Bibliometric and content analysis of medical articles in the PubMed database published by North Korean authors from 1997 to July 2017
    Geum Hee Jeong, Sun Huh
    Science Editing.2017; 4(2): 70.     CrossRef
  • Bibliometric Investigation on Preventive Medicine in North Korea
    Minsoo Jung
    The Health Care Manager.2013; 32(3): 253.     CrossRef
  • South Korean Study in a Public Health -Preventive Medicine and Sports Environment-
    Dan Silviu Radut, You Jin Kim, Byung Nam Min, Ki Jeoung Cho, Jong Young Lee
    Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health.2009; 42(4): 209.     CrossRef

JPMPH : Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health