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Dive into the research topics where Jinseob Kim is active.

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Featured researches published by Jinseob Kim.


International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2016

Effect of Climate Factors on the Childhood Pneumonia in Papua New Guinea: A Time-Series Analysis

Jinseob Kim; Jong-Hun Kim; Hae-Kwan Cheong; Ho Kim; Yasushi Honda; Mina Ha; Masahiro Hashizume; Joel Kolam; Kasis Inape

This study aimed to assess the association between climate factors and the incidence of childhood pneumonia in Papua New Guinea quantitatively and to evaluate the variability of the effect size according to their geographic properties. The pneumonia incidence in children under five-year and meteorological factors were obtained from six areas, including monthly rainfall and the monthly average daily maximum temperatures during the period from 1997 to 2006 from national health surveillance data. A generalized linear model was applied to measure the effect size of local and regional climate factor. The pooled risk of pneumonia in children per every 10 mm increase of rainfall was 0.24% (95% confidence interval: −0.01%–0.50%), and risk per every 1 °C increase of the monthly mean of the maximum daily temperatures was 4.88% (95% CI: 1.57–8.30). Southern oscillation index and dipole mode index showed an overall negative effect on childhood pneumonia incidence, −0.57% and −4.30%, respectively, and the risk of pneumonia was higher in the dry season than in the rainy season (pooled effect: 12.08%). There was a variability in the relationship between climate factors and pneumonia which is assumed to reflect distribution of the determinants of and vulnerability to pneumonia in the community.


Health Policy and Planning | 2016

Do antenatal care visits always contribute to facility-based delivery in Tanzania? A study of repeated cross-sectional data

Seung-Ah Choe; Jinseob Kim; Saerom Kim; Yukyung Park; Siril Michael Kullaya; Chang-Yup Kim

There is a known high disparity in access to perinatal care services between urban and rural areas in Tanzania. This study analysed repeated cross-sectional (RCS) data from Tanzania to explore the relationship between antenatal care (ANC) visits, facility-based delivery and the reasons for home births in women who had made ANC visits. We used data from RCS Demographic and Health Surveys spanning 20 years and a cluster sample of 30 830 women from ∼52 districts of Tanzania. The relationship between the number of ANC visits (up to four) and facility delivery in the latest pregnancy was explored. Regional changes in facility delivery and related variables over time in urban and rural areas were analysed using linear mixed models. To explore the disconnect between ANC visits and facility deliveries, reasons for home delivery were analysed. In the analytic model with other regional-level covariates, a higher proportion of ANC (>2–4 visits) and exposure to media related to an increased facility delivery rate in urban areas. For rural women, there was no significant relationship between the number of visits and facility delivery rate. According to the fifth wave result (2009–10), the most frequent reason for home delivery was ‘physical distance to facility’, and a significantly higher proportion of rural women reported that they were ‘not allowed to deliver in facility’. The disconnect between ANC visits and facility delivery in rural areas may be attributable to physical, cultural or familial barriers, and quality of care in health facilities. This suggests that improving access to ANC may not be enough to motivate facility-based delivery, especially in rural areas.


Optics Express | 2017

Corrugation-assisted metal-coated angled fiber facet for wavelength-dependent off-axis directional beaming

Hyuntai Kim; Haechan An; Jinseob Kim; Seungsu Lee; Kyoungyoon Park; Seungjong Lee; Seungsoo Hong; Luis Alonso Vazquez-Zuniga; S. Lee; Byoungho Lee; Yoonchan Jeong

We propose a fiber-optic-plasmonic hybrid device that is based on a corrugation-assisted metal-coated angled fiber facet (CA-MCAFF) for wavelength-dependent off-axis directional beaming (WODB). The device breaks into two key structures: One is the MCAFF structure, which is a modified Kretschmann configuration implemented onto a fiber platform, thereby being able to generate a unidirectional surface plasmon with dramatically enhanced properties in terms of non-confined diffracted radiation loss and operational bandwidth. The other is the periodic corrugation structure put on the MCAFF, thereby enabling WODB functionality out of the whole structures. The corrugated metal surface out-couples the surface plasmon mode to free-space optical radiation into a direction that varies with the wavelength of the optical radiation with excellent linearity. We perform extensive numerical investigations based on the finite-element-method and analyze the out-coupling efficiency (OCEout) and spectral bandwidth (SBout) of the proposed device for various designs and conditions. We determine the seven structural parameters of the device via taking sequential optimization steps. We deduce two optimal conditions particularly for the fiber-facet angle, in terms of the averaged OCEout or the SBout in the whole visible wavelength range (400 - 700 nm), which eventually leads to OCEout = 30.4% and SBout = 230 nm or to OCEout = 24.5% and SBout = 245 nm, respectively. These results suggest substantial enhancements in both OCEout and SBout, in comparison with the performance properties of a typical nano-slit-based device having a similar type of WODB functionality. The proposed CA-MCAFF is a simple, compact and efficient WODB device that is fully compatible with the state-of-the-art optical fiber technology.


Optics Express | 2014

Theoretical study on the generation of a low-noise plasmonic hotspot by means of a trench-assisted circular nano-slit

Hyuntai Kim; S. Lee; Sukmo Koo; Jinseob Kim; Kyoungyoon Park; Dongyeul Lee; Luis Alonso Vazquez-Zuniga; Namkyoo Park; Byoungho Lee; Yoonchan Jeong

We propose a novel trench-assisted circular metal nano-slit (CMNS) structure implementable on a fiber platform for the generation of a low-noise cylindrical surface plasmon (CSP) hotspot. We design trench structures based on a multi-pole cancellation method in order that a converging surface plasmon signal is well separated from co-propagating non-confined diffracted light (NCDL) at the hotspot location. In fact, the secondary radiation by the quasi-pole oscillation at the edge of the trench cancels the primary NCDL, thereby enhancing the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the CSP hotspot. In particular, we investigate two types of trench structures: a rectangular-trench (RT) structure and an asymmetric-parabolic-trench (APT) structure, which are considered for the sake of the simplicity of fabrication and of the maximal enhancement of the SNR, respectively. In comparison with a conventional CMNS having no trenches, we highlight that the mean SNR of the CSP hotspot is enhanced by 6.97 and 11.89 dB in case of the optimized RT and APT CMNSs, respectively. The proposed schemes are expected to be useful for increasing the SNR of plasmonic devices that are interfered by NCDL, such as various types of nano-slits for generating high-resolution plasmonic signals, for example.


Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health | 2013

Socioeconomic Status and Number of Children Among Korean Women: The Healthy Twin Study

Jinseob Kim; Joohon Sung

Objectives This study aimed to evaluate whether the birth rate is associated with socioeconomic status in the women of the Republic of Korea, where the birth rate is rapidly decreasing. Methods This study included 732 females from the Healthy Twin Study, a family-twin cohort. The participants were classified into 3 socioeconomic groups according to their average income, education, and occupation. The association between socioeconomic status and number of children was assessed using gamma regression analysis with a generalized linear mixed model, adjusting for the age group, smoking/alcohol status, and family relationships. Results The group with the highest education level had significantly fewer children compared with the group with the lowest education level (p=0.004). However, no significant associations were found according to household income level. The non-manual labor group had significantly fewer children compared with those working as homemakers (p=0.008). Conclusions This study aimed to explain the causal relationship between socioeconomic status and number of children. Associations between some socioeconomic status and number of children were found in Korea.


Tropical Medicine and Health | 2016

Associations between malaria and local and global climate variability in five regions in Papua New Guinea

Chisato Imai; Hae-Kwan Cheong; Ho Kim; Yasushi Honda; Jin-Hee Eum; Clara Tammy Kim; Jinseob Kim; Yoonhee Kim; Swadhin K. Behera; Mohd Nasir Hassan; Joshua Nealon; Hyenmi Chung; Masahiro Hashizume

BackgroundMalaria is a significant public health issue in Papua New Guinea (PNG) as the burden is among the highest in Asia and the Pacific region. Though PNG’s vulnerability to climate change and sensitivity of malaria mosquitoes to weather are well-documented, there are few in-depth epidemiological studies conducted on the potential impacts of climate on malaria incidence in the country.MethodsThis study explored what and how local weather and global climate variability impact on malaria incidence in five regions of PNG. Time series methods were applied to evaluate the associations of malaria incidence with weather and climate factors, respectively. Local weather factors including precipitation and temperature and global climate phenomena such as El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), the ENSO Modoki, the Southern Annular Mode, and the Indian Ocean Dipole were considered in analyses.ResultsThe results showed that malaria incidence was associated with local weather factors in most regions but at the different lag times and in directions. Meanwhile, there were trends in associations with global climate factors by geographical locations of study sites.ConclusionsOverall heterogeneous associations suggest the importance of location-specific approaches in PNG not only for further investigations but also public health interventions in repose to the potential impacts arising from climate change.


Optics Express | 2017

Metallic Fresnel zone plate implemented on an optical fiber facet for super-variable focusing of light

Hyuntai Kim; Jinseob Kim; Haechan An; Yohan Lee; Gun-Yeal Lee; Jeongkyun Na; Kyoungyoon Park; Seungjong Lee; S. Lee; Byoungho Lee; Yoonchan Jeong

We propose and investigate a metallic Fresnel zone plate (FZP/MFZP) implemented on a silver-coated optical fiber facet for super-variable focusing of light, the focal point of which can be drastically relocated by varying the wavelength of the incident light. We numerically show that when its nominal focal length is set to 20 μm at 550 nm, its effective focal length can be tuned by ~13.7 μm for 300-nm change in the visible wavelength range. This tuning sensitivity is over 20 times higher than that of a conventional silica-based spherical lens. Even with such high tuning sensitivity with respect to the incident wavelength change, the effective beam radius at the focal point is preserved nearly unchanged, irrespective of the incident wavelength. Then, we fabricate the proposed device, exploiting electron- and focused-ion-beam processes, and experimentally verify its super-variable focusing functionality at typical red, green, and blue wavelengths in the visible wavelength range, which is in good agreement with the numerical prediction. Moreover, we propose a novel MFZP structure that primarily exploits the surface-plasmon-polariton-mediated, extra-ordinary transmission effect. For this we make all the openings of an MFZP, which are determined by the fundamental FZP design formula, be partitioned by multi-rings of all-sub-wavelength annular slits, so that the transmission of azimuthally polarized light is inherently prohibited, thereby leading to super-variable and selective focusing of radially polarized light. We design and fabricate a proof-of-principle structure implemented on a gold-coated fused-silica substrate, and verify its novel characteristics both numerically and experimentally, which are mutually in good agreement. We stress that both the MFZP structures proposed here will be very useful for micro-machining, optical trapping, and biomedical sensing, in particular, which invariably seek compact, high-precision, and flexible focusing schemes.


Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health | 2013

Association Between Local Government Social Expenditures and Mortality Levels in Korea

Hansoo Ko; Jinseob Kim; Donggil Kim; Saerom Kim; Yukyung Park; Chang-Yup Kim

Objectives We examined the association between social expenditures of the local government and the mortality level in Korea, 2004 to 2010. Methods We used social expenditure data of 230 local governments during 2004 to 2010 from the Social Expenditure Database prepared by the Korean Institute for Health and Social Affairs. Fixed effect panel data regression analysis was adopted to look for associations between social expenditures and age-standardized mortality and the premature death index. Results Social expenditures of local governments per capita was not significantly associated with standardized mortality but was associated with the premature death index (decline of 1.0 [for males] and 0.5 [for females] for each expenditure of 100 000 Korean won, i.e., approximately 100 US dollar). As an index of the voluntary effort of local governments, the self-managed project ratio was associated with a decline in the standardized mortality in females (decline of 0.4 for each increase of 1%). The share of health care was not significant. Conclusions There were associations between social expenditures of the local government and the mortality level in Korea. In particular, social expenditures per capita were significantly associated with a decline in premature death. However, the voluntary efforts of local governments were not significantly related to the decline in premature death.


International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2018

Age, Period, and Cohort Effects on Suicide Mortality in South Korea, 1992–2015

Soonjoo Park; Yeong-Jun Song; Jinseob Kim; Myung Ki; Ji-Yeon Shin; Young-Man Kwon; Jiseun Lim

Although the effects of age, period, and cohort (APC) on suicide are important, previous work in this area may have been invalid because of an identification problem. We analyzed these effects under three different scenarios to identify vulnerable groups and thus overcame the identification problem. We extracted the annual numbers of suicides from the National Death Register of Korea (1992–2015) and estimated the APC effects. The annual average suicide rates in 1992–2015 were 31.5 and 14.7 per 100,000 males and females, respectively. The APC effects on suicide were similar in both sexes. The age effect was clearly higher in older subjects, in contrast to the minimal changes apparent during earlier adulthood. The birth cohort effect showed an inverted U shape; a higher cohort effect was evident in females born in the early 1980s when period drift was larger than 3.7%/year. Period effect increased sharply during the early 1990s and 2000s. We found that elderly and young females may be at a particularly high risk of suicide in Korea.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2017

Subwavelength ring assisted Fresnel zone plate for radially polarized light focusing

Hyuntai Kim; Jinseob Kim; Haechan An; Kyoungyoon Park; Yoonchan Jeong

We propose a Fresnel zone plate comprised with periodic subwavelength rings which generates radially polarized focused light. The novel monolayer metasurface will simplify the generation of radially polarized focused light.

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Yoonchan Jeong

Seoul National University

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Hyuntai Kim

University of Southampton

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Kyoungyoon Park

Seoul National University

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Byoungho Lee

Seoul National University

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Haechan An

Seoul National University

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S. Lee

Kyungpook National University

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Chang-Yup Kim

Seoul National University

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