1.Re-evaluating the Final Goal in the New Postgraduate Clinical Training System
Masahiko ISHIKAWA ; Hiroyoshi ENDO ; Kenji HAYASHI ; Hideo SHINOZAKI
Medical Education 2008;39(1):19-27
More than 2 years have passed since the new postgraduate clinical training program was instituted in 2004 to improve the clinical ability of Japanese physicians. However, there have already been discussions about whether the undergraduate curriculum and the postgraduate program should be improved.
After the first physicians finished their training under the new program in the spring of 2006, questions were raised about whether the identical final goals of training could be achieved by transferring some items of postgraduate clinical training to the undergraduate period. Such a change might invigorate the undergraduate curriculum and enhance the effectiveness of the postgraduate program.
1) Are-evaluation of the final goals of postgraduate clinical training might allow some items to be taught during the undergraduate period.
2) Several questionnaires were sent to 211 supervising physicians and 184 first-year residents who had just completed the new internship program at 25 teaching hospitals (university hospitals and postgraduate training hospitals).
3) Both trainees and supervising physicians reacted positively about and expressed a willingness to participate in training items, including noninvasive diagnostic procedures and laboratory studies not harmful to patients, during advanced courses in the undergraduate period.
4) Both trainees and supervising physicians reacted negatively to participating in any invasive procedures that might affect a patient's welfare or sense of shame during the undergraduate period.
5) In the future, training with simulated procedures before actual patients are encountered and enlisting enough supervising physicians are essential for unifying the undergraduate medical school curriculum and postgraduate clinical training programs.
2.Intraoperative monitoring of flash visual evoked potential under general anesthesia.
Hironobu HAYASHI ; Masahiko KAWAGUCHI
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2017;70(2):127-135
In neurosurgical procedures that may cause visual impairment in the intraoperative period, the monitoring of flash visual evoked potential (VEP) is clinically used to evaluate visual function. Patients are unconscious during surgery under general anesthesia, making flash VEP monitoring useful as it can objectively evaluate visual function. The flash stimulus input to the retina is transmitted to the optic nerve, optic chiasm, optic tract, lateral geniculate body, optic radiation (geniculocalcarine tract), and visual cortical area, and the VEP waveform is recorded from the occipital region. Intraoperative flash VEP monitoring allows detection of dysfunction arising anywhere in the optic pathway, from the retina to the visual cortex. Particularly important steps to obtain reproducible intraoperative flash VEP waveforms under general anesthesia are total intravenous anesthesia with propofol, use of retinal flash stimulation devices using high-intensity light-emitting diodes, and a combination of electroretinography to confirm that the flash stimulus has reached the retina. Relatively major postoperative visual impairment can be detected by intraoperative decreases in the flash VEP amplitude.
Anesthesia, General*
;
Anesthesia, Intravenous
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Electroretinography
;
Evoked Potentials, Visual*
;
Geniculate Bodies
;
Humans
;
Intraoperative Period
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Monitoring, Intraoperative*
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Neurosurgical Procedures
;
Occipital Lobe
;
Optic Chiasm
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Optic Nerve
;
Optic Tract
;
Propofol
;
Retina
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Retinaldehyde
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Vision Disorders
;
Visual Cortex
3.Workshop for Workshop Planning
Susumu TANAKA ; Shigeru HAYASHI ; Yasuyuki TOKURA ; Masahiko HATAO ; Masako OTAKE ; Junichi SUZUKI
Medical Education 1981;12(6):398-406
4.Assessment of a System for Evaluating Clinical Skills in Cardiology with the Objective Structured Clinical Examination at the End of Bedside Learning
Hirofumi DEGUCHI ; Tetsuya HAYASHI ; Fumio TERASAKI ; Akira UKIMURA ; Yasushi KITAURA ; Tsukasa TUDA ; Masahiko HATAO
Medical Education 2004;35(4):245-253
Recently, objective structured clinical examinations (OSCEs) have been used to assess the clinical skills of medical trainees. We introduced an OSCE station for heart disease to assess clinical competence at the completion of bedside learning. The station involved students performing a 15-minute focused interview and physical examination of a simulated patient with mitral regurgitation and congestive heart failure. The physical examination included listening to a tape recording of a heart murmur. Each student was evaluated by three examiners. The average scores for the interview and physical examination were 22.3±4.0 points (perfect score, 34 points) and 15.2±2.9 points (perfect score, 22 points), respectively. Kappa statistics, which evaluate variability among examiners, revealed moderate to substantial agreement in the results for both the interview and the physical examination. This study suggests that our OSCE station is useful for assessing clinical competence at the end of bedside learning.
5.Research for the Effective Use of the Medication Guides for Patients
Michiko Yamamoto ; Tsutomu Matsuda ; Machi Suka ; Aya Furukawa ; Takako Igarashi ; Masahiko Hayashi ; Hiroki Sugimori
Japanese Journal of Social Pharmacy 2013;32(2):8-17
The Medication Guides for Patients (MGPs) are being offered as information on prescription drugs for patients by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (MHLW). The MHLW published the Risk Management Plan in April, 2012, and it noted that the MGPs should be utilized in usual risk minimization activities. It is not clear, however, whether the MGPs are efficiently utilized in actual settings. Hence, we conducted a questionnaire survey of the pharmacists in the pharmacies with dispensing and the hospitals in Mie and Yamagata prefectures to investigate the actual circumstances of MGPs utilization and to understand the existing barriers associated with the use of the MGPs as medication instructions for patients. We sent the questionnaires by mail and obtained responses from 444 facilities (33.9%) of 1,309 facilities. The recognition level of the MGPs was about 30 percent in the dispensing pharmacies, and about 50 percent in the hospitals. The MGPs were utilized as a common communication tool with the patients in approximately 20 percent of the facilities. Many respondents requested that the frequency of important and other adverse reactions should be described in the MGPs, and wider ranges of MGPs should be further implemented.
Moreover, our data suggests the problem is that the present MGPs are mainly applied to special types of patients, such as those with higher literacy level or those who requested a detailed explanation. Thus, it is apparent that it is necessary to review the MGPs contents again to improve their practical benefits and disseminate them more widely.
6.General Survey of Balneal Treatment in the Tohoku Region
Takashi SUGIYAMA ; Michio KAYABA ; Masahiko KATAGATA ; Chaiseng CHIA ; Yoshimasa YABE ; Hiroshi HAYASHI ; Hiroshi ITO ; Tatsuo TOKAIRIN ; Mamoru SAKURAI
The Journal of The Japanese Society of Balneology, Climatology and Physical Medicine 1962;26(3-4):139-148
The results of our general and medical surveys are summarized as follows:
1) The visitors to this spa are inhabitants of Yamagata prefecture, farmers being the largest in number.
2) Considering the fact that more than half the number of spa visitors come here with therapeutic or convalescing purpose, this spa may be said to be a spa to which visitors come with the sole object of curative treatment.
3) Visitors came for the treatment of common cold, hypertension, neuralgia and diseases of the stomach and intestines respetively from the frequency of diseases. The fact that the visitors with cold were largest in number was probably because of the prevalence of common cold at the time of our survey.
4) Half the number of spa visitors stayed for about 2 weeks, and most of them took bath four to five times a day for curative treatment.
5) 40.1% spa visitors drank hot spring water for curative treatment. Which incidence is higher than that in our previous reports for other Tohoku Area.
6) Only 6.1% of the visitors came to the spa under doctor's direction. Those who noted the bathing reaction: anorexia, feeling of weakness etc., were 23.1%
7) In the tubeless gastric analysis (Gastrotest) scarcely any change was observable for successive drinking of hot spring water.
8) In most cases the oral temperature measured at the time of bathing in this spa never returned to the value before bathing for two hours and the feeling of warmth remained for a long time. This is probably due to the chemical properties of the spring waters and proper treatment after bathing.
7.Report on Group Study about Audio-visual Teaching Technology
Shigeru HAYASHI ; Kenichi UEMURA ; Nobutaka DOBA ; Masahiko HATAO ; Motokazu HORI ; Kazumasa HOSHINO ; Saichi HOSODA ; Hitoshi ISHIKAWA ; Tsutomu IWABUCHI ; Taketoshi SUGIYAMA ; Susumu TANAKA ; Yasuyuki TOKURA
Medical Education 1983;14(3):209-213
8.Report of the Enquete about Continuing Medical Education to District Medical Associations
Tsutomu IWABUCHI ; Hiroshi KIKUCHI ; Shinichiro IZUMI ; Toru ITOH ; Kenichi UEMURA ; Kenichi KOBAYASHI ; Michio OGASAWARA ; Shoichi SUZUKI ; Arito TORII ; Masahiko HATAO ; Shigeru HAYASHI ; Masateru FUJISAWA ; Yoshiji YAMANE
Medical Education 1984;15(2):74-78