1.Improving Hand Hygiene Thoroughness in a Blood Collection Room
Yasuyuki SUGIURA ; Kazuhisa SAWADA ; Masami OKUDAIRA ; Rie INATOMI ; Norio TATSUMI ; Takako ISOBE ; Takehiko OKAMURA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2017;65(5):946-955
Hand hygiene is the foundation of effective infection control in health care settings, including in areas designated for blood collection. However, in such areas, patients are assigned in rapid succession and hand hygiene can lapse due to time pressure. Therefore, we examined a more efficient hand hygiene technique with consideration of these time constraints. An infection control issue was noted during a blood test procedure, based on Kiken Yochi Training. Meetings were then held to discuss the issue and a study was proposed to test a more efficient hand hygiene technique as a solution. The hand hygiene technique involved (1) performing hand hygiene after glove removal, (2) wearing gloves just before directly touching the patient, and (3) concentrating on the finger and hand areas involved in glove removal when performing hand hygiene using a rapid-drying hand disinfectant. These three items were compared before and after the change of procedure using a rapid-drying hand disinfectant. The results confirmed that it is possible to practice efficient hand hygiene by recognizing the areas of the hand that are contaminated during the blood collection procedure. Difficulties involving hand hygiene in a blood collection area include thoroughness in using one glove for one patient and time constraints. We suggest that performing effective infection control is possible by unifying the timing of appropriate hand hygiene with the timing of blood collection.
2.Study on Effective and Safe Cancer Chemotherapy for Outpatients (Part1): Influence of Establishment of the Outpatient Cancer Chemotherapy Unit on Effective Usage of Hospital Beds
Eiji YONEYAMA ; Satoru MASE ; Hiroshi YOSHIDA ; Yuji OHIRA ; Hironobu NIINOMI ; Kazuhisa TSUZUKI ; Mizuho MURAKOSHI ; Kazuyuki NAKAMURA ; Makiko ARAI ; Kazuhisa SAWADA ; Akio KATSUMI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2008;57(1):1-7
Although the Outpatient Cancer Chemotherapy (OCC) Unit was established with in Anjo-Kosei Hospital in 2006, its real worth remains to be elucidated. To address this, the following subjects were examined;effective usage of hospital beds changes in the number of outpatients given to chemotherapy, length of hospitalization, the number of patients transferred by ambulance to the hospital, hospital occupancy rate, and the number of frequently used chemotherapy regimens.Since the establishment of the OCC Unit, the number of patients transferred by ambulance has increased and length of hospitalization has gradually decreased, accompanied by the increase in the number of outpatients treated at the OCC Unit. Additionally, no significant change was observed in the hospital occupancy rate. Furthermore, of the frequently used chemotherapy regimens, nine regimens were available for 62.4% of the total number of outpatients of the OCC Unit.These results indicated the useful effect of the establishment of the OCC Unit on the usage of hospital beds, and provided significant information helpful in promoting the effective and safe chemotherapy for outpatients in the OCC Unit.
Chemotherapy-Oncologic Procedure
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Unit
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seconds
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Outpatients
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Malignant Neoplasms
3.Results of Abdominal Examinations by Sonography at Hokkaido Koseiren-Affiliated Facilities over the Past 10 Years
Akikazu NAGANUMA ; Yasufumi TODA ; Norio KONDO ; Kazuhisa MATSUMOTO ; Hidenori SAWADA ; Shunsuke NAKAYA ; Shunichi NAKAMURA ; Takahiro YAMAGISHI ; Hiroshi AZUMA ; Kazurou KUBOTA ; Masakazu KURITA ; Akimichi IMAMURA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2010;59(2):92-96
The Association of Radiologists under the umbrella of the Hokkaido Prefectural Federation of Agricultural Cooperatives for Health and Welfare (Hokkaido Koseiren) set up in 2003 a committee with the aim of improving the accuracy of mass health examinations. Recently, the committee reviewed the results of abdominal examinations by sonography performed at the eight hospitals affiliated with the Koseiren during fiscal 2006 that ended March 31, 2007. Of those individuals who underwent thorough health checkups, 91.3% had their abdomen examined by ultrasound. Something anomalous was detected in 68.1% of the examinees and 4.5% needed to undergo closer checkups, the rate of response to which was 74.5%. The detection ratio of cancer by ultrasonography was worked out at 0.048%. The ratio of patients requiring a closer exam to the total and the cancer detection ratio varied widely from hospital to hospital. The wide dispersion was ascribable to the difference in the standard of judgment for indicating closer examinations and the difference in the number of examinees so far as the cancer detection ratio was concerned, from hospital to hospital. A look at the primary findings of anomalies revealed that fatty liver topped the list accounting for 27.4% followed by cholelithiasis with 3.6%. From this, we realized that the abdominal examinations by sonography served to detect cancer and lifestyle-induced health problems as well. Organ-wise, the cancer cases found during the period from 1998 to 2009 broke down as follows: kidney (79 cases), liver (40 cases), pancreas (30 cases), gall bladder (24 cases), others (8 cases) and spleen (none). The cancer detection ratio per year ranged from 0.03 to 0.05% during the period.