1.Readiness of Community-based Medical Facilities Liked up to Mainstay Cancer Treatment Hospitals in a Preparatory Stage of Critical Pathway Development: A Survey
Toyohisa YAGUCHI ; Shinya KATO ; Toyomi MATSUURA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2010;58(5):558-562
The Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare on March 1, 2008, made public a guideline for putting in order hospitals expected to play central roles as strongholds in fighting cancer. The guideline called on these major hospitals to tabulate critical pathways in collaboration with community medical facilities and share the tables among them. In preparation for this collaborative project, we made a questionnaire survey to sound out the practitioners in the Ama area on this. The survey found that opinions of some respondents differed widely from what the hospitals thought should be. Those which replied that they were ready to accept cancer patients accounted for 52.6% of the respondents. Some facilities, which said they were going to take care of cancer patients in any stage, were not capable of palliative care. It was also found that there were many facilities who did not like to accept patients referred to them from hospitals. From these findings, we thought more efforts should bemade to establish closer cooperation between clinics and hospitals.
2.Benefits of Preoperative Oral Rehydration Procedure
Yumiko SHIMOZATO ; Noriko OTANI ; Daisuke NISHIMURA ; Akira OYAMA ; Katsuko ITO ; Toyohisa YAGUCHI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2013;62(4):631-635
Along with the accumulation of evidence to support the use of an oral rehydration solution before surgery, there is a strong tendency for the period of fasting before the induction of general anesthesia to become shorter and shorter. In this study, we compared hunger, thirst, psychology and onset of pneumonia as a sequela in between two groups of surgical patients-one with preoperative rehydration and the other without. The results showed that stress did not build up in the patients given a preoperative oral rehydration solution even after they returned to their rooms and did not have an intravenous drip. No one in either group developed pneumonia after surgery.