2.A Survey of Attitude to Iyaku Bungyo Separation of Dispensing from Medical Practice
Masanori NISHIO ; Hirotsune ITATSU ; Izumi TSUYAMA ; Michiko ITO ; Hiroko AKITA ; Hirohiko YAMASE
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2004;53(1):38-45
Iyaku Bungyo means separation of dispensing from medical practice. Under this system, physicians provide outpatients with prescriptions, if need be, after examinations. The patients visit neighborhood drugstores and produce the prescriptions to pharmacists, who are authorized to accept patients covered by health insurance and to make up prescriptions. The prescribed medicines will be given to the patients in exchange for the payment. The pharmacists will also instruct the customers how to take in the prescribed medicines properly. The system has been so designed as to improve the quality of health care services with the physicians and pharmacists performing their respective roles as the specialists. However, the government office is promoting the Iyaku Bungyo system in favor of the pharmacies outside the hospitals in the name of the containment of medical costs, charging that the medical institutions prescribe and dispense so many kinds and quantities of medicines the patients can hardly take in, simply to make large profits from a comfortable margin between the market price for each pharmaceutical and the price at which it is actually purchased. Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare officials and insurers have trumpeted the system as if it were an ideal scheme to curb health care costs. In reality, however, medical expenses have been boosted up. It can be taken for granted that the expenditure on national health care is increasing year after year with the population of the elderly on the rise and progress in medical technology. Notwithstanding, it is an important task to hold down increases in the cost of health care with the advent of an era of an aging population.
Marital separation
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experience (practice)
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Medical
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Health Care
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Surveys
3.Practice and Perspective of Clinical Research on Kampo Medicine
Kampo Medicine 2007;58(5):833-845
I will illustrate our research, which elucidate the efficacy of Kampo medicines for “Ki”.In order to compare hangekobokuto with kososan, we assessed them by binocular infrared video pupillography. The results revealed that sympathetic nerve activity was inhibited by taking hangekobokuto in the patients belonging to sympathetic dominant group, while it was stimulated by taking kososan in the patients belonging to parasympathetic dominant group.Administration of hangekobokuto has decreased the value of brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity. This result suggests that hangekobokuto ameliorates the elasticity of vascular wall, which is closely related to autonomic nervous system.The gastric emptying rate, which was evaluated by ultrasonographic method in FD patients, showed its significant increase after administration of hangekobokuto.Global gene expression analysis using a DNA chip has shown the pharmacological actions of kososan.In the animal study using depression-like model mice, we have found that kososan decreased the suppression of neurogenesis.
Medicine, Kampo
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experience (practice)
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Clinical Research
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Cancer patients and suicide and depression
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Psychological suppression