3.Undergraduate Medical Education in Community Hospitals
Medical Education 2003;34(3):153-157
Most doctors in community hospitals are clinicians and differ in many ways from physician-scientists in university hospitals. However, conversion from clinician to clinician-educator requires various innovations and endeavors such as the establishment of clinical clerkship, dissemination of EBM, progressive disputation, sufficient accountability, cooperation with co-medical. Undergraduate medical education in community hospitals should be focused on primary care, general internal medicine and emergency medicine. Achievement in our hospital is discussed.
4.Management for Neuroblastoma Infants in Japan.
Takafumi MATSUMURA ; Tadashi SAWADA ; Takuma SHIKATA ; Yoshifumi MATSUMOTO ; Tomoko IEHARA
Korean Journal of Pediatric Hematology-Oncology 1997;4(1):18-28
INTRODUCTION: The introduction of the mass screening (MS) program measuring urinary catecholamine metabolites at six-months of age for detecting neuroblastoma has resulted in the increase in both number and incidence of patients detected less than one year of age in Japan. The prognosis for infantile neuroblastoma is well known to surpass that for older patients. The prognosis of patients detected by MS has been outstanding. However, in Japan, there has been no consentient guideline of optimal therapeutic management for infants with favorable prognosis. There has been a continuing controversy on the selection of appropriate therapy for neuroblastoma infants, especially those detected by MS. In Japan, based on prognostic factors including N-myc amplification as well as clinical stage, patients with advanced disease receive a consistent therapeutic regimen. In contrast, neuroblastoma infants with favorable biological characteristics and clinical outcome have received variable therapeutic regimens at individual institutions. Resulting from an urgency to assess the status and enforce a consentient as well as an optimal management plan for neuroblastoma infants, the survey and the analysis on a total of 537 cases, including 355 cases detected by the MS program, were conducted and led us to the conclusion that neuroblastoma infants in Japan had been treated comparatively intensive despite excellent prognosis, and further that adjuvant chemotherapy should be avoidable or minimized for patients with such excellent outcomes. Finally, a nationwide prospective study (#9405) has been commenced in Japan to standardize and to optimize therapy for neuroblastoma infants. In the present paper, retrospective considerations and current stategy for neuroblastoma infants in Japan will be discussed.
Chemotherapy, Adjuvant
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Humans
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Incidence
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Infant*
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Japan*
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Mass Screening
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Neuroblastoma*
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Population Characteristics
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Prognosis
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Retrospective Studies
5.Improved Database Management System for Surveillance of Drug-Resistant Microorganisms
Akira HIRAISHI ; Hironori IWANO ; Kazuyo SATO ; Takeshi MATSUMURA ; Tadashi KOISHIZAWA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2009;58(1):34-38
In step with the widespread use of antimicrobial agents in medical treatment, microbial substitution and emergence of new drug-resistant bacteria have become life-threatening problem today. Both have resulted from the postopreative practice of administering prophylactic medication and long-term, desultory drug administration. Drug-resistant microbes can occur easily with the inadequate use of drug. Therefore, our hospital has held in check the incidence of drug-resistant microbial infection by letting ICT members make the rounds of the wards and go over the notifications of the prescription of specific antimicrobial agents and the reports on drug-resistant bacteria. At the begiing, the notification and the report were filed separately. Recently, the information obtained from thses two channels has become easier of access because all the necessary data appear on the same screen at once by using patients' IDs. We believe that the streamlining of work and putting two kinds of data together have proved very usefull for infection control, as it has become possible to keep careful watch over the use of specific antimicrobial agents and the detection of drug-resistant microorganism simulataneously. By sharing the information obtained by us with all the rest on the hospital staff, we will continue to make efforts along this line and contribute toward the prevention of the outbreak of nosocomial infections as well as community-acquired ones.
Microorganism
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Pharmaceutical Preparations
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Medical Surveillance
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microbial
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Bacterial
6.Status Quo of General Medicine at Teaching Hospitals in Japan. Report by General Medicine Working Group of Japan Society for Medical Education.
Tsuguya FUKUI ; Takanobu IMANAKA ; Makoto AOKI ; Junji OHTAKI ; Nobutaro BAN ; Tadashi MATSUMURA ; Shigeaki MUKOHBARA
Medical Education 1997;28(1):9-17
In April, 1995, 392 teaching hospitals were surveyed by questionnaire regarding status quo of general medicine in Japan. Independent department of general medicine was established in 11 university and 16 non-university teaching hospitals (11.6% of the respondents). There were another 23 hospitals-3 universtiy and 20 non-university hospitals-in which general medicine was practiced at other department. Therefore, 50 hospitals (21.5% of the respondents) had a group of physicians practicing general medicine in one way or another.
Many problems surrounding general medicine, however, were raised, especially about conceptual gaps between generalist physicians and specialists or patients. It is mandatory for clinicians and educators in general medicine to make the concept of general medicine explicit in understandable words for other specialists and lay people. In addition, high quality practice, education and research products are essential to attract more doctors of younger generation.
7.Renal Sarcoidosis Monitored with Gallium Scintigraphy: Report of a Case
Takeshi Morimoto ; Koji Watanabe ; Ryotaro Kobashi ; Kenji Kanaji ; Tadashi Matsumura ; Toshio Doi
General Medicine 2000;1(1):23-27
A 60-year-old male was diagnosed as having sarcoidosis four months previously because of bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy seen on a chest X-ray, uveitis, and elevation of serum angiotensin converting enzyme. In summer, the patient suffered from hypercalcemia, hypercalciuria, and renal dysfunction. Renal biopsy showed interstitial nephritis with gallium scintigraphy demonstrating high uptake in the bilateral hilum, eyes, and kidneys. Corticosteroid treatment was effective in remarkably improving the renal disorder and radiographic abnormalities.
The calcium metabolic abnormalities and the granulomatous interstitial nephritis showed a marked response to corticosteroid therapy, so that immediate administration of corticosteroid may be justified even in cases without histological evidences. Gallium scintigraphy is suggested to be useful in noninvasive examination in acute stage of sarcoidosis.
8.A Report of Consideration for Physician's Recognition Award (PRA) in American Medical Association.
Nobuya HASHIMOTO ; Haruhiko SAITO ; Makoto AOKI ; Masahiko HATAO ; Tomonobu KAWANO ; Hideya SAKURAI ; Tadashi MATSUMURA ; Osamu NISHIZAKI ; Toshiro OHMURA ; Shoichi SUZUKI
Medical Education 2000;31(3):153-157
The committee of continuing medical education in Japan Society for Medical Education discussed on PRA of American Medical Association [AMA]. We have first analyzed the brochure of PRA for the members of AMA, and then prepared the questionnaire for AMA. We were able to obtained the answers to the questionnaire which were sent to AMA through courtesy of Japanese Medical Association (JMA). It was realized that AMA emphasizes an importance of PRA for medical practice to the patients; nevertheless acquisition rate of PRA is actually low, and so AMA proceeds with efforts towards completion of PRA.
9.On a Report of the Questionaire Regarding Activities of Continuing Medical Education for the Primary Care Physicians in University Hospitals and Clinical Training Hospitals.
Nobuya HASHIMOTO ; Tadashi MATSUMURA ; Yoshifusa AIZAWA ; Makoto AOKI ; Takanobu IMANAKA ; Osamu NISHIZAKI ; Hideya SAKURAI ; Toshinobu SATO ; Masahiro TANABE ; Rikio TOKUNAGA
Medical Education 2002;33(6):429-436
The aim of this study is to clarify the present situation of activities of continuing medical education (CME) for the primary care physicians to whom the leading hospitals, such as universities and clinical trainee hospitals perform CME in their regions. A questionaire was designed for main 4 parts, as following: 1) On the purpose of CME for the physicians. 2) On the organization (office) managing CME in the hospitals. 3) On the strategies of CME. 4) On the evaluation of CME. Answers to a questionaire were replied from 234 institutions (58.1%). Analyzing the results, we recognized that the leading hospitals actively carried out CME for the primary care physicians in the community. Furthermore, conversion to experiential learning from passive learning and establishment of evaluation methods should be promoted in CME.
10.Successful Repair of Critical Air Leakage after Surgery for a Large Thoracoabdominal Aortic Aneurysm
Hitoshi Matsumura ; Hideichi Wada ; Mitsuru Fujii ; Masahiro Oosumi ; Gou Kuwahara ; Yuta Sukehiro ; Noritoshi Minematsu ; Masaru Nishimi ; Tadashi Tashiro
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2013;42(5):434-437
A 76-year-old woman with a sudden onset of chest and back pain was admitted to our hospital. Computed tomography (CT) showed a giant thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm. Therefore, the patient underwent emergency operation. Under a left anterolateral thoracotomy and pararectal laparotomy with left heart bypass, we performed graft replacement of the thoracoabdominal aorta and reconstruction of the celiac artery, superior mesenteric artery and renal arteries. The left lung was tightly adhered to the aneurysm because of the contained rupture. Copious pulmonary bleeding and air leakage occurred due to thrombectomy of the aneurysm. During the operation, critical air leakage was repaired using the remaining aneurysmal wall. The postoperative course was uneventful. The patient was discharged 16 days after surgery. Copious air leakage due to lung injury was a potentially life-threating condition in the postoperative course of this case of thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm. Surgical treatment of critical air leakage due to lung injury is very important in thoracic surgery.