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Original Article
Benign bowel disease
Development of a home health care service platform for ostomy patient management
Seongwoo Yang, Ji Won Park, Hyuk Hur, Min Jung Kim, Seung-Yong Jeong, Kyounghoon Park, Ik Yong Kim
Ann Coloproctol. 2024;40(1):36-43.   Published online November 21, 2022
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3393/ac.2022.00360.0051
  • 9,001 View
  • 362 Download
  • 11 Web of Science
  • 10 Citations
AbstractAbstract PDF
Purpose
The use of an ostomy for urination and defecation leads to reduced quality of life. Although many ostomy management strategies are needed, such strategies are often implemented by patients. Thus, there is a need for a home health care service platform that can be used in ostomy patient management.
Methods
We developed an ostomy patient management platform by identifying the needs of patients and medical staff through the Chronic Care Ostomy Self-Management Training Program in the United States and from studies conducted in Korea.
Results
The platform encompassed physical management, psychological management, maintenance of social function, spiritual stability, and home medical care. These components were implemented through monitoring, self-care guidance, and a community platform. For the monitoring function, patients entered their health status in a mobile application (app); the medical staff at the affiliated hospital then monitored the stoma status through a web interface.
Conclusion
Our platform allows medical staff to monitor ostomy patients through a web interface and help such patients to fully manage their ostomy at home using an app. We expect that the continued development of patient-oriented functions in our app will allow ostomy patients to experience quality-of-life improvements.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Examining the Impact of Telehealth Stoma Care Interventions on the Ostomates: A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis
    Soyeon Kim, Ha Na Jeong
    Journal of Clinical Nursing.2026; 35(2): 621.     CrossRef
  • Nurses’ willingness and demand for providing Internet+home care services in the elderly with disabilities or dementia and the associated factors in provincial hospitals in China: A cross-sectional study
    Jiaxin Lv, Binbin Xu, Haixia Yu, Nian Yao, Jiaji Hu, Zhengkun Shi, Yuhua Fan, Cailan Zhang, Jinghui Zhang
    Geriatric Nursing.2026; 68: 103873.     CrossRef
  • Effects of Intestinal Stoma Odor and Pouch Ballooning on Quality of Life and Associated Intervention Strategies
    Cui-Ping Xiu, Hai-Yan Jin, Xiao-Qing Xu, Peng Chen
    Journal of Multidisciplinary Healthcare.2026; Volume 19: 1.     CrossRef
  • Applications of Telemedicine in Patients with an Ostomy: A Scoping Review
    Zhuang Hui-Ren, Zhang Jin, Zheng Pian, Zhang Wei-ying
    Advances in Skin & Wound Care.2025; 38(5): 258.     CrossRef
  • Experience of participating in national home-based medical care project for cancer patients with a temporary stoma: a qualitative study
    Su Jung Lee, SolBi Jang, YongEun Hong, Hyun Suk Park, Young Ae Kim
    Supportive Care in Cancer.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • A randomized controlled trial of a digital lifestyle intervention involving postoperative patients with colorectal cancer
    Young Il Kim, In Ja Park, Jun-Soo Ro, Jong Lyul Lee, Chan Wook Kim, Yong Sik Yoon, Seok-Byung Lim, Chang Sik Yu, Yura Lee, Yae Won Tak, Seockhoon Chung, Kyung Won Kim, Yousun Ko, Sung-Cheol Yun, Min-Woo Jo, Jong Won Lee
    npj Digital Medicine.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Need-based remote exercise management platform for colorectal cancer patients with intestinal stoma: design and pilot usability evaluation
    Cui Yao, Lingyu Ding, Jing Yang, Yueming Sun
    Frontiers in Rehabilitation Sciences.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • A mobile application for home-based care of indwelling medical devices: Protocol for development and pilot implementation based on the self-efficacy framework and the analysis, design, development, implementation, evaluation (ADDIE) model
    Dakyung Lee, Anna Lee
    Health Informatics Journal.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Mobile Applications for People With Fecal Intestinal Stomas: A Scoping Review With Technological Prospection
    Isabelle Pereira da Silva, Rafael Moreira do Nascimento, Felipe Silva Ferreira, Silvia Kalyma Paiva Lucena, Iara Lorena Alves de Morais, Rhayssa de Oliveira e Araújo, Isabelle Katherinne Fernandes Costa
    Advances in Skin & Wound Care.2025; 38(9): E107.     CrossRef
  • Lebensqualität von Stomapatienten
    Michael S. Kasparek
    coloproctology.2023; 45(4): 242.     CrossRef
Review
The Future Medical Science and Colorectal Surgeons
Young Jin Kim
Ann Coloproctol. 2017;33(6):207-209.   Published online December 31, 2017
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3393/ac.2017.33.6.207
  • 5,543 View
  • 64 Download
  • 6 Web of Science
  • 7 Citations
AbstractAbstract PDF

Future medical technology breakthroughs will build from the incredible progress made in computers, biotechnology, and nanotechnology and from the information learned from the human genome. With such technology and information, computer-aided diagnoses, organ replacement, gene therapy, personalized drugs, and even age reversal will become possible. True 3-dimensional system technology will enable surgeons to envision key clinical features and will help them in planning complex surgery. Surgeons will enter surgical instructions in a virtual space from a remote medical center, order a medical robot to perform the operation, and review the operation in real time on a monitor. Surgeons will be better than artificial intelligence or automated robots when surgeons (or we) love patients and ask questions for a better future. The purpose of this paper is looking at the future medical science and the changes of colorectal surgeons.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Development of artificial intelligence technology in diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis of colorectal cancer
    Feng Liang, Shu Wang, Kai Zhang, Tong-Jun Liu, Jian-Nan Li
    World Journal of Gastrointestinal Oncology.2022; 14(1): 124.     CrossRef
  • Modern Machine Learning Practices in Colorectal Surgery: A Scoping Review
    Stephanie Taha-Mehlitz, Silvio Däster, Laura Bach, Vincent Ochs, Markus von Flüe, Daniel Steinemann, Anas Taha
    Journal of Clinical Medicine.2022; 11(9): 2431.     CrossRef
  • Surgical safety in the COVID-19 era: present and future considerations
    Young Il Kim, In Ja Park
    Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research.2022; 102(6): 295.     CrossRef
  • Introducing Mobile Collaborative Robots into Bioprocessing Environments: Personalised Drug Manufacturing and Environmental Monitoring
    Robins Mathew, Robert McGee, Kevin Roche, Shada Warreth, Nikolaos Papakostas
    Applied Sciences.2022; 12(21): 10895.     CrossRef
  • 7P pediatrics — Medicine of Development and Health Programming
    Leyla S. Namazova-Baranova, Alexandr A. Baranov, Elena A. Vishneva, Anna A. Alekseeva, Valerii Y. Albitskiy, Irina A. Belyaeva, Viliya A. Bulgakova, Nato D. Vashakmadze, Olga B. Gordeeva, Irina V. Zelenkova, Elena V. Kaitukova, Georgii A. Karkashadze, Ele
    Annals of the Russian academy of medical sciences.2021; 76(6): 622.     CrossRef
  • Application and Prospect of a Mobile Hospital in Disaster Response
    Xinlin Chen, Lu Lu, Jie Shi, Xin Zhang, Haojun Fan, Bin Fan, Bo Qu, Qi Lv, Shike Hou
    Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness.2020; 14(3): 377.     CrossRef
  • The effect of diets delivered into the gastrointestinal tract on gut motility after colorectal surgery—a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials
    Sophie Hogan, Daniel Steffens, Anna Rangan, Michael Solomon, Sharon Carey
    European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.2019; 73(10): 1331.     CrossRef
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