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"Min Young Kim"

Original Articles
Effects of Having Usual Source of Care on Preventive Services and Chronic Disease Control: A Systematic Review
Min Young Kim, Ju Heon Kim, Il-Kwon Choi, In Hong Hwang, Soo Young Kim
Korean J Fam Med 2012;33(6):336-345.   Published online November 27, 2012
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4082/kjfm.2012.33.6.336
Background

Having usual source of care has been associated with improved receipt of preventive services and control of chronic diseases (such as hypertension, diabetes, and hypercholesterolemia). The objective of this study was to examine whether having usual source of care is associated with improved receipt of preventive services and control of chronic diseases.

Methods

We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane, CINAHL, KMbase, KoreaMed, RiSS4U, National Assembly Library, and KISS for studies released through May 31st 2011. Two authors independently extracted the data. We manually searched the references and twenty recent related articles on PubMed. To assess the risk of bias RoBANS tool was used.

Results

We identified 10 studies. Most having usual source of care were associated with improved receipt of preventive services (cervical cancer screening, clinical breast exam, mammogram, prostate cancer screening, and flu shot) compared with no usual source of care. However, gastric cancer and colon cancer screening were difficult to conclude and blood pressure checkup showed mixed results. Overall there was no association between having usual source of care and smoking behaviors and the effect on chronic disease control was difficult to conclude.

Conclusion

Having usual source of care was associated with improved receipt of preventive services and overall the results were consistent. So, the results suggested that having usual source of care may help to receive preventive services. Hereafter, cohort studies are needed to evaluate casual relationships and more studies are needed in various countries and systems.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • The NSCH patient-centered medical home scale: A measurement history, critique, and commentary
    Phillip M. Hughes, Genevieve Graaf, Kathleen C. Thomas
    Children's Health Care.2025; 54(2): 237.     CrossRef
  • The gap is still here: Access to physical and mental health care for children and adolescents 15 years after the Affordable Care Act
    Amy Manning
    F1000Research.2025; 14: 167.     CrossRef
  • The role of primary care attributes in preventing loss or change of usual source of care: a nationwide cohort study
    Takuya Aoki, Sota Zukeran, Masato Matsushima
    Family Practice.2024; 41(5): 726.     CrossRef
  • Generating user-driven patient personas to support preventive health care activities of rural-living unattached patients
    Lindsay Burton, Kathy L. Rush, Cherisse L. Seaton, Eric P.H. Li, Kendra Corman, Charlene E. Ronquillo, Selena Davis, Mindy A. Smith
    PEC Innovation.2024; 4: 100274.     CrossRef
  • Comprehensive Evidence-Based Health Maintenance
    Ami Schattner
    The American Journal of Medicine.2024; 137(8): 706.     CrossRef
  • Users’ perception of quality as a driver of private healthcare use in Mexico: Insights from the People’s Voice Survey
    Svetlana V. Doubova, Hannah H. Leslie, Ricardo Pérez-Cuevas, Margaret E. Kruk, Catherine Arsenault, Steve Zimmerman
    PLOS ONE.2024; 19(6): e0306179.     CrossRef
  • Age of Autism Spectrum Disorder Diagnosis and Patient-Centered Medical Home Components
    C. A. Limbers, T. Zeleznik, G. Beuley, A. Milliken, E. Hernandez, S. R. Ryan-Pettes
    Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Cross-Sectional Analysis of Difficulties Using Usual Source of Care for People with Disability
    Jane Ko, Jae-Hyun Park
    INQUIRY: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Asian American Self-Reported Discrimination in Healthcare and Having a Usual Source of Care
    Thomas K. Le, Leah Cha, Gilbert Gee, Lorraine T. Dean, Hee-Soon Juon, Winston Tseng
    Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities.2023; 10(1): 259.     CrossRef
  • The relationship between having a usual source of primary care and COVID‐19 parental vaccine hesitancy: A nationwide survey among Japanese mothers
    Kenya Ie, Mio Kushibuchi, Tomoya Tsuchida, Iori Motohashi, Masanori Hirose, Steven M. Albert, Miyako Kimura
    Journal of General and Family Medicine.2023; 24(4): 215.     CrossRef
  • Factors associated with the status of usual source of care during the COVID-19 pandemic: a nationwide survey in Japan
    Takuya Aoki, Masato Matsushima
    BMC Primary Care.2023;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Sociodemographic Characteristics and Inadequate Usual Sources of Healthcare in a National Sample of US Refugees
    Kyle J. Baumann, Tilahun Adera
    International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.2022; 19(12): 7234.     CrossRef
  • A cross-sectional study of the preventive health care activities of western Canadian rural-living patients unattached to primary care providers
    Kathy L. Rush, Lindsay Burton, Cherisse L. Seaton, Mindy A. Smith, Eric P.H. Li, Charlene E. Ronquillo, Khalad Hasan, Selena Davis, Mona Mattei
    Preventive Medicine Reports.2022; 29: 101913.     CrossRef
  • Determinants of choice of usual source of care among older people with cardiovascular diseases in China: evidence from the Study on Global Ageing and Adult Health
    Tiange Xu, Katya Loban, Xiaolin Wei, Wenhua Wang
    BMC Public Health.2022;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Factors Associated With Hearing Aid Use Among Medicare Beneficiaries
    Lama Assi, Nicholas S Reed, Carrie L Nieman, Amber Willink, Steven M Albert
    Innovation in Aging.2021;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Early Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Experience With the Use of Telehealth to Address Disparities: Scoping Review
    James E Bailey, Cathy Gurgol, Eric Pan, Shirilyn Njie, Susan Emmett, Justin Gatwood, Lynne Gauthier, Lisa G Rosas, Shannon M Kearney, Samantha Kleindienst Robler, Raymona H Lawrence, Karen L Margolis, Ifeyinwa Osunkwo, Denise Wilfley, Vallabh O Shah
    Journal of Medical Internet Research.2021; 23(12): e28503.     CrossRef
  • Validating the New Primary Care Measure in the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey
    R. Henry Olaisen, Susan A. Flocke, Kathleen A. Smyth, Mark D. Schluchter, Siran M. Koroukian, Kurt C. Stange
    Medical Care.2020; 58(1): 52.     CrossRef
  • The management of diabetes in everyday life study: Design and methods for a pragmatic randomized controlled trial comparing the effectiveness of text messaging versus health coaching
    James E. Bailey, Satya Surbhi, Justin Gatwood, Susan Butterworth, Mace Coday, Sohul A. Shuvo, Ankur A. Dashputre, Ian M. Brooks, Bonnie L. Binkley, Carrie Jo Riordan, Helmut O. Steinberg, Mary Lou Gutierrez, Lauren E. Haley, Cardella L. Leak, Elizabeth A.
    Contemporary Clinical Trials.2020; 96: 106080.     CrossRef
  • States with fewer criminalizing immigrant policies have smaller health care inequities between citizens and noncitizens
    Maria-Elena De Trinidad Young, Hiram Beltrán-Sánchez, Steven P. Wallace
    BMC Public Health.2020;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Disconnected: a survey of users and nonusers of telehealth and their use of primary care
    Winston R Liaw, Anuradha Jetty, Megan Coffman, Stephen Petterson, Miranda A Moore, Gayathri Sridhar, Aliza S Gordon, Judith J Stephenson, Wallace Adamson, Andrew W Bazemore
    Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association.2019; 26(5): 420.     CrossRef
  • The impact of the adoption of a patient rostering model on primary care access and continuity of care in urban family practices in Ontario, Canada
    Jatinderpreet Singh, Simone Dahrouge, Michael E. Green
    BMC Family Practice.2019;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Health needs, utilization of services and access to care among Medicaid and uninsured patients with chronic disease in health centres
    Hailun Liang, May A. Beydoun, Shaker M. Eid
    Journal of Health Services Research & Policy.2019; 24(3): 172.     CrossRef
  • Trends in the Types of Usual Sources of Care: A Shift from People to Places or Nothing at All
    Winston Liaw, Anuradha Jetty, Stephen Petterson, Andrew Bazemore, Larry Green
    Health Services Research.2018; 53(4): 2346.     CrossRef
  • The Effect of Having a Regular Doctor as a Primary Care Provider on Emergency Room Utilization in South Korea
    Su-Young Lee, Hyeong-Seok Lim
    Korean Journal of Family Medicine.2017; 38(6): 322.     CrossRef
  • Unmet Primary Care Needs in Diabetic Patients with Multimorbidity in a Medically Underserved Area
    Bianca M. Jackson, Mary Lou Gutierrez, George E. Relyea, Erik L. Carlton, SangNam Ahn, Bonnie L. Binkley, James E. Bailey
    Health Services Research and Managerial Epidemiology.2017;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Having a usual source of care and its associated factors in Korean adults: a cross-sectional study of the 2012 Korea Health Panel Survey
    Ah Reum An, Kyoungwoo Kim, Jae-Ho Lee, Nak-Jin Sung, Sang-il Lee, Min Kyung Hyun
    BMC Family Practice.2016;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Community Health Center Utilization Following the 2008 Medicaid Expansion in Oregon: Implications for the Affordable Care Act
    Brigit Hatch, Steffani R. Bailey, Stuart Cowburn, Miguel Marino, Heather Angier, Jennifer E. DeVoe
    American Journal of Public Health.2016; 106(4): 645.     CrossRef
  • Subgroup differences in having a usual source of health care among working-age adults with and without disabilities
    Konrad Dobbertin, Willi Horner-Johnson, Jae Chul Lee, Elena M. Andresen
    Disability and Health Journal.2015; 8(2): 296.     CrossRef
  • The Influence of Health Systems on Hypertension Awareness, Treatment, and Control: A Systematic Literature Review
    Will Maimaris, Jared Paty, Pablo Perel, Helena Legido-Quigley, Dina Balabanova, Robby Nieuwlaat, Martin Mckee, Mark J. Caulfield
    PLoS Medicine.2013; 10(7): e1001490.     CrossRef
  • 4,740 View
  • 40 Download
  • 29 Crossref
Misinterpreting Odds Ratio in the Articles Published in Korean Journal of Family Medicine
Ju Heon Kim, Min Young Kim, Soo Young Kim, In Hong Hwang, En Jin Kang
Korean J Fam Med 2012;33(2):89-93.   Published online March 30, 2012
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4082/kjfm.2012.33.2.89
Background

In reporting results of case-control studies, odds ratios are useful methods of reporting findings. However, odds ratios are often misinterpreted in the literature and by general readers.

Methods

We searched all original articles which were published in the Korean Journal of Family Medicine from 1980 to May 2011 and identified those that report "odds ratios." Misinterpretation of odds ratios as relative risks has been identified. Estimated risk ratios were calculated when possible and compared with odds ratios.

Results

One hundred and twenty-eight articles using odds ratios were identified. Among those, 122 articles were analyzed for the frequency of misinterpretation of odds ratios as relative risks. Twenty-two reports out of these 122 articles misinterpreted odds ratios as relative risks. The percentage of misinterpreting reports decreased over years. Seventy-seven reports were analyzed to compare the estimated risk ratios with odds ratios. In most of these articles, odds ratios were greater than estimated risk ratios, 60% of which had larger than 20% standardized differences.

Conclusion

In reports published in the Korean Journal of Family Medicine, odds ratios are frequently used. They were misinterpreted in part of the reports, although decreasing trends over years were observed.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Nota epidemiológica: razón de ODDS (OR)
    Guillermo Sánchez Vanegas, Ana Milena Diaz Dominguez, Daniela Colmenares Rojas
    Revista Repertorio de Medicina y Cirugía.2024; 33(2): 210.     CrossRef
  • Now is the Time for a Postracial Medicine: Biomedical Research, the National Institutes of Health, and the Perpetuation of Scientific Racism
    Javier Perez-Rodriguez, Alejandro de la Fuente
    The American Journal of Bioethics.2017; 17(9): 36.     CrossRef
  • Comments on Statistical Errors for May Issue 2012
    Yong Gyu Park
    Korean Journal of Family Medicine.2012; 33(3): 186.     CrossRef
  • 3,918 View
  • 30 Download
  • 3 Crossref
The Quality of Reporting of Cohort, Case-Control Studies in the Korean Journal of Family Medicine
Mi Ra Kim, Min Young Kim, Soo Young Kim, In Hong Hwang, Yeo Jung Yoon
Korean J Fam Med 2012;33(2):79-88.   Published online March 30, 2012
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4082/kjfm.2012.33.2.79
Background

The Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) statement was developed to improve the reporting of observational studies. We aimed to evaluate the quality of reporting in cohort studies and case-control studies among observational studies published in the Korean Journal of Family Medicine.

Methods

We searched for cohort studies and case-control studies published as original articles in the Journal of the Korean Academy of Family Medicine during the period January 1992 through December 2009. The main outcome measures were the number and proportion of cohort studies and case-control studies that reported each of 22 checklist items of STROBE.

Results

We identified a total of 84 articles, of which 46 articles were cohort studies and 38 were case-control studies. Concerning methods, study designs (10%), bias (13%), study size (0%), statistical methods (12-c and 12-e items, 0%; 12-d item, cohort study, 6%) have been poorly reported. Of results, participants (5-6%), descriptive data (14-b item, 5%), and funding (1%) among other information have been poorly reported.

Conclusion

The degree of adherence the STROBE recommendations was relatively low in cohort studies and case-control studies published in the Korean Journal of Family Medicine. An effort to improve the reporting of observational studies by application and recommendation of the STROBE statement is required.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Confounders: A threat to the interpretation of research findings in endodontics
    Mehran Farajollahi, Shima Saber Tahan, Abbasali Keshtkar, Ove A. Peters
    International Endodontic Journal.2025; 58(3): 411.     CrossRef
  • Social media and internet search data to inform drug utilization: A systematic scoping review
    Roman Keller, Alessandra Spanu, Milo Alan Puhan, Antoine Flahault, Christian Lovis, Margot Mütsch, Raphaelle Beau-Lejdstrom
    Frontiers in Digital Health.2023;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • The relationship between endorsing reporting guidelines or trial registration and the impact factor or total citations in surgical journals
    Jing Zhou, Jianqiang Li, Jingao Zhang, Bo Geng, Yao Chen, Xiaobin Zhou
    PeerJ.2022; 10: e12837.     CrossRef
  • A review found inadequate reporting of case–control studies of risk factors for pancreatic cancer
    Angela MacCarthy, Paula Dhiman, Shona Kirtley, Patricia Logullo, Bethan Copsey, Gary S. Collins
    Journal of Clinical Epidemiology.2021; 133: 32.     CrossRef
  • What is a Case-Control Study?
    Esther B Dupépé, Kimberly P Kicielinski, Amber S Gordon, Beverly C Walters
    Neurosurgery.2019; 84(4): 819.     CrossRef
  • Analysis of Reports on Observational Studies Published in the Korean Journal of Women Health Nursing based on the STROBE Guideline
    Sue Kim, Hyun-Ei Oh, Ju-Eun Song, Myounghee Kim, Sukhee Ahn, Eun-Joo Lee, Eun-Mi Jun, Sukhee Cheon
    Korean Journal of Women Health Nursing.2014; 20(4): 287.     CrossRef
  • Case-control studies in neurosurgery
    Cody L. Nesvick, Clinton J. Thompson, Frederick A. Boop, Paul Klimo
    Journal of Neurosurgery.2014; 121(2): 285.     CrossRef
  • 4,127 View
  • 25 Download
  • 7 Crossref
Effect of Video-Education on Pre-Procedure Anxiety.
Min Young Kim, Serng Bai Park, Su Yong Park, Young Eun Choi, Young Sung Kim, Sang Hyun Lee, Seung Su Kim, Kyung Hee Cho
Korean J Fam Med 2011;32(1):37-45.   Published online January 20, 2011
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4082/kjfm.2011.32.1.37
Background
The value of endoscopy is more increasing as a tool of the cancer screening, and many studies are now progressed for decreasing the inconvenience of patients who undergo the endoscopy. There are some overseas studies that the video-education before procedures like colonoscopy or coronary angiography increases the satisfaction and decreases the anxiety of the patients. But in Korea, there is lack of studies about the methods of decreasing the anxiety of the patients before procedures especially endoscopy.Methods: We carried out the survey with 95 patients underwent the endoscopy in the medical health checkup center of National Health Insurance Medical Center during 19 July 2008 to 8 September 2008. The patients who had the medical history of gastrectomy, had pains due to another diseases and had a prescription about psychiatric medicine including hypnotics were excluded.Results: Statistically there are no differences between two groups of the video-education and the paper-education according to age, sex, height, weight, body mass index, numbers of former endoscopy, smoking history and educational standard. The video-education is more effective than the paper-education in decreasing the anxiety index between before and after the education.Conclusion: The prior video-education for the patients awaiting endoscopy can decrease the anxiety about procedure. Moreover, it can decrease the suffi cation of the patients and increase the satisfaction of physicians. If the patients feeling the prior anxiety are educated with the video before undergoing endoscopy, the video-education is very effective to decrease the prior anxiety of the patients.
  • 1,976 View
  • 35 Download
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