1.Cooperation Between Hospital Pharmacy Department and Insurance Pharmacy in Outpatient Chemotherapy
Maki ITOH ; Kaori MIYATA ; Hirohide TAKAYA ; Atsushi SAITOH ; Shigeru TAKAHASHI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2013;61(5):703-709
Recently, the diversification of chemotherapy has brought about an increase in the number of outpatients who receive prescription drugs at insurance pharmacies after the intravenous infusion of anticancer agents at hospitals. The problem is that insurance pharmacies do not have ample knowledge of treatment plans and disease stages, and the presence or absence of cancer notification. Moreover, medication regimens, including washout, periods, have become so complicated that patient compliance rates have shown a tendency to decline gradually.
Such being the circumstances, we have come to think that it would be better to enter into partnership with the dispensary of Senboku Kumiai General Hospital for sharing information in order to give the patients more beneficial medication instructions.
For a start, we met with the hospital pharmacists, exchanged necessary information and ideas, got acquainted with chemotherapy regimens, and shared the tools of medication teaching. Through the participation in the guidance given by hospital pharmacists to outpatients who began to receive chemotherapy, and lectures on chemotherapy and medication by physicians and hospital pharmacists of the general hospital, we have become able to offer more appropriate counsel to the outpatients. Furthermore, we created a channel between the dispensary and Senboku Chozai Pharmacy for feedback and for asking questions about not only the conditions of the patients but also the presence or absence of cancer notification.
We believe that our efforts have contributed toward increasing the safety and efficacy of chemotherapy.
2.Post-polio Syndrome
Yoichiro AOYAGI ; Satoru SAEKI ; Koshiro SAWADA ; Yasuyuki MATSUSHIMA ; Megumi TOKI ; Emiko WADA ; Atsushi KINOSHITA ; Nobuyuki KAWATE ; Hirotaka KOBAYASHI ; Izumi KONDO ; Eiich SAITOH
The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine 2015;52(10):625-633
Post-polio syndrome (PPS) is the term used to describe the symptoms that may develop many years after acute paralytic poliomyelitis( APP). In the case of PPS, the symptoms and signs include progressive muscle wasting and weakness, limb pain, and/or fatigue, occurring one or more decades after maximal recovery from APP. An overuse of enlarged motor units is suspected to cause the deterioration of some nerve terminals or the loss of the motor units themselves. This could in turn induce PPS symptoms such as new muscle weakness and atrophy. Electromyography (EMG) is often a strong tool to diagnose and evaluate PPS. Some studies have shown that mild to moderate intensity muscular strengthening has a positive effect in patients affected by PPS. Rehabilitation for PPS patients should utilize a multiprofessional and multidisciplinary approach. PPS patients should be advised to avoid both inactivity and overuse of the affected muscles. Finally, patient evaluation is often required to access the need of orthoses and assistive devices.
3.Guidance for Post-polio Syndrome (PPS)
Yoichiro Aoyagi ; Koshiro Sawada ; Fumi Toda ; Yasuyuki Matsushima ; Atsushi Kinoshita ; Emiko Wada ; Megumi Toki ; Nobuyuki Kawade ; Hirotaka Kobayashi ; Akiko Hachisuka ; Satoru Saeki ; Izumi Kondo ; Eiichi Saitoh
The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine 2017;54(2):140-144