1.HCV Antibody Positive Rates of Blood Donors in Yamaguchi Prefecture.
Tetsuo MORIMOTO ; Yusuke MATSUMOTO ; Masaya ANDO ; Ikuo MITANI ; Yukinori OKAZAKI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1994;43(2):90-92
The HCV antibody positive rates of blood donors were studied in Yamaguchi Prefecture. C100-3 antibody was examined by the method of the 1st generation. The subjects were 146, 792 people who donated blood from Nov. 1989 to Dec. 1990. The average positive rate was 1.01% in Yamaguchi Prefecture. The positive rates of more than 3% were registered in four towns. In one town out of these four, the average positive rate was 22.0% It was extremely higher than the other three towns. Further study will be required to elucidate such regional differences in the HCV positive rate in the prefecture.
2.Male/female ratio of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma.
Tetsuo MORIMOTO ; Fujio MURAKAMI ; Yasuhiko MIYOSHI ; Ikuo MITANI ; Hiroaki KAWANO ; Yukinori OKAZAKI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1991;39(5):1060-1062
The ratio of men to women was studied in 331 patients hospitalized into our department for the past three years for various liver diseases. Two factors seemed to affect the sex difference in the morbidity of liver disease. One was a history of drinking, the other a positive ratio of HBs antigen. So, heavy drinkers and HBs antigen positive cases were excluded from the patients with chronic hepatitis, liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma, and the male/female ratio was studied again. The ratio of men to women in the patients with liver cirrhosis was 1.3: 1, 4. 1: 1 in the patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and 2.0: 1 in the patients with chronic hepatitis. The male ratio was strikingly high in the case of hepatocellular carcinoma. It is thought that liver cirrhosis is a cause of hepatocellular carcinoma. And then differences in the results of liver function tests between men and women were studied in the patients with liver cirrhosis. However, no remarkable difference was found between men and women.
3.The Influence of Both Drinking and Smoking Habits on Blood Pressure Level.
Tetsuo MORIMOTO ; Fujio MURAKAMI ; Yasuhiko MIYOSHI ; Ikuo MITANI ; Akihiro KAWANO ; Yukinori OKAZAKI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1991;40(1):40-41
We gathered information of both drinking and smoking habits by questionnairing. The subjects of our study were 116 men around Yanai City. They were divided into five groups. 1st: neither drinking nor smoking habits (23 cases). 2nd: 20 or 40 grams of ethyl alcohol daily and no smoking habit (31 cases). 3rd: more than 40 grams daily and more than 10 cigarettes (32 cases). 4th: 20 grams daily and more than 10 cigarettes (16 cases). 5th: no drinking habit and more than 10 cigarettes daily (14 cases).
The 1st group was a control group, and was compared with the 2nd, 3rd 4th and 5th groups. Consequently both systolic and diastolic blood pressure levels rose significantly only in the 3rd group. Only systolic blood pressure level rose significantly in the 4th group. And so it was suggested that both drinking and smoking habits raised both systolic and diastolic blood pressure levels.
4.The Influence of Aging and Obesity on the Physical Health of Females.
Tetsuo MORIMOTO ; Fujio MURAKAMI ; Yasuhiko MIYOSHI ; Hiroaki KAWANO ; Ikuo MITANI ; Yukinori OKAZAKI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1991;40(2):113-117
The subjects are 223 women who participated in a mass medical examination. Their ages are between 40 and 79 years. We divided them into four age groups, and studied how aging and obesity influenced their physical health. The results showed the obesity index and serum total protein level were significantly low in the 70-to-79 age group. The serum total cholesterol level was significantly high in the age group between 40 and 50, and it was thought that the elevated cholesterol levels were due to menopause. Thus in females this suggests that a great physical change occurs first in the age group between 40 and 50, and second in the age group between 60 and 70.
Using 165 female cases whose ages were between 40 and 69 years were subdivided into four obesity index groups, we studied how the obesity influenced their physical health. The results showed that the problems include the elevation of diastolic blood pressure levels and serum uric acid levels.
5.The Study on the Serum Lipid in Cases of Thorough Physical Examinations.
Tetsuo MORIMOTO ; Fujio MURAKAMI ; Masaya ANDO ; Yasuhiko MIYOSHI ; Ikuo MITANI ; Kazuhiko IRIE ; Yukinori OKAZAKI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1992;41(1):21-24
To find a link between lifestyle and arteriosclerosis, the serum lipid values were studied in those who had entered our hospital for a thorough physical examination. The subjects were 136 men and 31 women. They were divided into six groups. 1st: neither drinking nor smoking habits (24 cases). 2nd: 20 or 40 grams of ethyl alcohol daily and no smoking habit (45 cases). 3rd: more than 40 grams daily and more than 10 cigarettes (21 cases). 4th: 20 grams daily and more than 10 cigarettes (25 cases). 5th: no drinking habit and more than 10 cigarettes daily (21 cases). 6th: women who had neither drinking nor smoking habits (31 cases).
The 2nd group was a control group, and was compared with each group. It was found that only TG values were significantly high in the 3rd group. HDL-C values were significantly low in the 5th group. There were no significant differences in the 1st and 4th groups. T-CHO and LDL-C values were significantly high in the 6th group. These facts suggest that it is difficult to correlate both drinking and smoking habits with the incidence of arteriosclerosis. And perhaps it is the same in women, because LDL-C values were high in women, but at the same time HDL-C values were high.
6.8. Learning Assessment and Good Practice (2)
Shoichi ITO ; Hitoaki OKAZAKI ; Hiroyuki KOMATSU ; Hiroshi NISHIGORI ; Yasushi MATSUYAMA ; Masanaga YAMAWAKI ; Makoto KIKUKAWA ; Ikuo SHIMIZU ; Mariko NAKAMURA ; Shohei MITANI
Medical Education 2023;54(2):182-186
In the 2022 Model Core Curriculum for Medical Education in Japan, "Chapter 3, Educational strategies and assessment" section II. "Learner Assessment," consists of three parts : II-1. Approaches to learner assessment, II-2. Assessment methods, and II-3. Questions about learner assessment. Based on the idea that "the way assessment is done varies from institution to institution," the answer to the "Question" is deliberately not included. We hope that readers will refer to this chapter when planning learning assessments in curriculum development while considering the curriculum's background and context.