1.A Case of Aorto-Enteric Fistula after Reconstruction for an Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm.
Akiko Miyazaki ; Maromi Tachibana ; Masahiko Ikebuchi ; Nagahisa Tonomoto ; Shigetsugu Ohgi
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2002;31(3):191-193
A 63-year-old man was admitted because of sudden hematemesis and melena. Seven years previously, he had had a woven Dacron aorto-biiliac graft inserted for abdominal aortic aneurysm. Aorto-enteric fistula was diagnosed based on the clinical findings and enhanced computed tomography. It was not clear whether the insected Y graft was infected. We first reconstructed the axillo-bifemoral bypass and then removed the Y graft. Good result can be obtained with prompt surgical intervention.
2.Validation Study of Claims-based Definitions of Suspected Atypical Femoral Fractures Using Clinical Information
Shiro TANAKA ; Hiroshi HAGINO ; Akiko ISHIZUKA ; Teruhiko MIYAZAKI ; Takanori YAMAMOTO ; Takayuki HOSOI
Japanese Journal of Pharmacoepidemiology 2016;21(1):13-19
Objective: Monitoring the incidence of atypical femoral fractures (AFFs) using medical claim databases is useful to assess the safety of long-term bisphosphonate exposure. Therefore, we aimed to validate the relationship between clinically-defined suspected AFFs and the candidate patients obtained from claims data at three hospitals in Japan.
Design: A cross-sectional study involving three hospitals that perform bone fracture surgery and from which electronic medical record databases of diagnoses and procedures are available.
Methods: Candidate patients were at the medical databases using two International Classification of Diseases, 10th Edition (ICD-10) codes (subtrochanteric fracture and fracture of shaft of femur) in the claims databases. These potential cases by claim-based definition were validated using clinically-confirmed information such as, the patient operation records, the discharge records, or radiographic imaging findings as suspected AFFs.
Results: Among fracture cases in the hospitals, and 9 cases with subtrochanteric fracture and 23 cases with femoral shaft fracture were identified based on the ICD-10 codes in the claims databases. Clinically confirmed subtrochanteric fracture had a sensitivity of 81.8% (95% CI: 48.2-97.7%), and a specificity of 100.0% (95% CI: 99.9-100.0%). For femoral shaft fracture, the sensitivity was 82.1% (95% CI: 63.1-93.9%), and the specificity was 100.0% (95% CI: 99.9-100.0%). In subgroup analyses, the sensitivities in patients over the age of 50 years with a single fracture site and with osteoporosis were relatively higher than in other subgroups.
Conclusion: The claims-based definitions of suspected AFFs are accurate, indicating the value of pharmacoepidemiological studies using the National Receipt Database.
3.Association between Undergraduate Education for Community-Based Medicine and General Practice Majors: A Longitudinal Study in Japan
Mariko ISHISAKA ; Akiko HANAMOTO ; Makoto KANEKO ; Daisuke KATO ; Kazuhisa MOTOMURA ; Yuki KATAOKA
Korean Journal of Family Medicine 2023;44(4):215-223
Background:
There is a shortage of general practitioners in Japan. With the revision of educational guidelines, general practice (GP) education has improved. However, the amount of education on GP in medical schools remains inconsistent. This study examined the relationship between medical students’ amount of GP-related education and their subsequent choice of GP majors.
Methods:
A retrospective cohort study was conducted in a teaching hospital in Japan. Participants were residents in the hospital. The exposure comprised compulsory lectures and training time for community-based medicine in medical schools. The outcome included participants choosing GP majors after their initial 2-year junior residency.
Results:
Fifty-one participants were included in the final analysis. Of these, 14 majored in GP and 37 in non-GP after their initial 2-year junior residency. Of the participants who took GP lectures for 18 hours or more, 11 chose GP majors, and 18 chose non-GP majors (risk ratio, 2.78; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.88–8.79). Of the participants who underwent training for 12 days or more, 10 chose GP majors, and 16 chose non-GP majors (risk ratio, 2.40; 95% CI, 0.87–6.68).
Conclusion
The results do not support the association between the amount of compulsory undergraduate education for community-based medicine and the subsequent increase in the number of residents choosing GP majors in Japan. Educators would do well to explore different approaches, such as improving the quality of education to increase the number of GP residents. Further research is needed to reach more definitive conclusions.
4.An Opinion Survey on Purchasing Nonprescription Drugs over the Internet in Remote Islands
Tadahiko Hirayama ; Hidekazu Tanaka ; Shintarou Suzuki ; Aki Nagatomi ; Seiji Sakumoto ; Toshihiro Kitahara ; Cho-ichiro Miyazaki ; Kiyomitu Yoshitani ; Hiroki Satoh ; Satoko Hori ; Akiko Miki ; Yasufumi Sawada
Japanese Journal of Drug Informatics 2013;15(2):57-63
Objective: The revised Pharmaceutical Affairs Act that came into force in June 2009 prohibits the sale of nonprescription drugs via mail. However, as a provisional measure, regular users and inhabitants of remote islands who do not have access to pharmacies or drug stores are allowed to purchase nonprescription drugs via mail until the end of May 2013. This study involves a survey on the purchasing of nonprescription drugs by Internet-illiterate inhabitants of the remote Goto Islands, Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan.
Methods: Our process began with the distribution of questionnaires via mail to inhabitants of the remote Goto Islands, of whom 3,819 were randomly selected. The responses were sent between January 22 and February 26, 2011. We analyzed problems presented by 522 inhabitants who were Internet-illiterate.
Results: The results revealed that 57.3% of the respondents living on large islands—with pharmacies, drug stores, and pharmacists— (e.g., Fukueshima) and 85.3% of respondents living on small islands scattered around large islands—with none of the abovementioned amenities— (e.g., Maeshima) were Internet-illiterate. Additionally, a majority of the respondents (more than 80%) felt no need to purchase nonprescription drugs over the Internet. However, considering that a handful of these inhabitants do, or will at some time need to purchase nonprescription drugs over the Internet, we strive to establish an optimal system for supplying medications to these Internet-illiterate inhabitants.
Conclusion: Community pharmacists need to establish close relationships with the Internet illiterate (particularly those living on small islands) and promote the overall appropriate use of medicinal products.
5.Study on the Status of Proper Medicine Use and Information Provision in the Remote Islands of Nagasaki Prefecture
Tadahiko Hirayama ; Shintarou Suzuki ; Kouhei Inoue ; Seiji Sakumoto ; Yoichi Ide ; Toshihiro Kitahara ; Masaharu Nakano ; Cho-ichiro Miyazaki ; Ken Dakeshita ; Noritaka Ideguchi ; Hiroki Satoh ; Akiko Miki ; Yasufumi Sawada
Japanese Journal of Drug Informatics 2016;18(2):87-94
Objectives: First steps to promote the proper use of medicines in remote islands and rural areas are as follows: (1) recognition of the profession of “pharmacist” from secondary-remote-island residents who do not have a pharmacy or drugstore or the opportunity for pharmacist contact and (2) an understanding by remote-island residents of the advantages of having a “family pharmacist.”
Methods: Repeated “medicine information and consultation sessions” for secondary-remote-island residents of Japan’s Nagasaki Prefecture were held. Residents were then surveyed for changes in awareness of or demand for pharmacists and the nature of such changes.
Results: Before the information sessions, 29.7% of residents did not recognize the profession of pharmacy, but the extent of their recognition increased after information sessions were concluded. They were asked “Who explains medicines in a way that is easy to understand ?”; more than half responded “doctors” before the information session, but after information sessions were concluded, those who said “pharmacists” increased.
Conclusion: Conducting “medicine information and consultation sessions” for residents of secondary-remote islands and rural areas enabled them to understand the profession of pharmacy. The initiatives in the present study are first steps toward promoting proper use of medicines by residents of remote islands and rural areas who use “family pharmacies/pharmacists.”