1.Actual Status of Death at Home in Eldery Patients who Received Home Care Service in Rural Area in Aichi Prefecture.
Tomihiro HAYAKAWA ; Tamao TSUZUKI ; Masaaki IKEDO ; Chihiro HASEGAWA ; Toshiyuki SAKATA ; Hideki TOZAWA ; Tamotsu KANAZAWA ; Toshiyo ANDOH ; Miyuki HAYASHI ; Emiko KAWAI ; Makoto MIYAJI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2002;50(5):683-689
To clarify what are contributing factors associated with the place to die (home or hospital) in a rural area, we investigated several background factors of 107 patients who died at home or in hospital after receiving home care service during the period of four years from July 1995 to June 2000. The subjects were divided into two group those who died at home (39 cases, 36%) and those who died in our hospital (68 cases, 64%). The ratio of deaths at home increased every year, and reached a half of those who died after receiving home care service. The average age in those who died at home were 87.1±9.5 years, that was higher than that of those who died in our hospital (82.2±9.8 years). There was no difference betwe two groups about sex, basic diseases and the time required to get to the hospital by car. Death at home was more preferred by patients, whereas death in the hospital was preferred by patients' families. The level of activities of daily living (ADL) in those who died at home was lower compared with that in those who died in the hospital. Those who died at home significantly had lesser complaints (pain, dyspnea and so on) and had more care-givers in the family, than those who died in the hospital. These results revealed that the major factors in death at home are: 1) low level of ADL, 2) preference to death at home expressed by patients, 3) presence of additional care-givers, and 4) no complaint of symptoms from patients.
2.Remote Cardiac Rehabilitation With Wearable Devices
Atsuko NAKAYAMA ; Noriko ISHII ; Mami MANTANI ; Kazumi SAMUKAWA ; Rieko TSUNETA ; Megumi MARUKAWA ; Kayoko OHNO ; Azusa YOSHIDA ; Emiko HASEGAWA ; Junko SAKAMOTO ; Kentaro HORI ; Shinya TAKAHASHI ; Kaoruko KOMURO ; Takashi HIRUMA ; Ryo ABE ; Togo NORIMATSU ; Mai SHIMBO ; Miyu TAJIMA ; Mika NAGASAKI ; Takuya KAWAHARA ; Mamoru NANASATO ; Toshimi IKEMAGE ; Mitsuaki ISOBE
Korean Circulation Journal 2023;53(11):727-743
Although cardiac rehabilitation (CR) has been shown to improve exercise tolerance and prognosis in patients with cardiovascular diseases, there remains low participation in outpatient CR. This may be attributed to the patients’ busy schedules and difficulty in visiting the hospital due to distance, cost, avoidance of exercise, and severity of coronary disease. To overcome these challenges, many countries are exploring the possibility of remote CR. Specifically, there is increasing attention on the development of remote CR devices, which allow transmission of vital information to the hospital via a remote CR application linked to a wearable device for telemonitoring by dedicated hospital staff. In addition, remote CR programs can support return to work after hospitalization. Previous studies have demonstrated the effects of remote CR on exercise tolerance. However, the preventive effects of remote CR on cardiac events and mortality remain controversial. Thus, safe and effective remote CR requires exercise risk stratification for each patient, telenursing by skilled staff, and multidisciplinary interventions. Therefore, quality assurance of telenursing and multi-disciplinary interventions will be essential for remote CR. Remote CR may become an important part of cardiac management in the future. However, issues such as costeffectiveness and insurance coverage still persist.
3.Screening for Distress and Its Impact on Palliative Care Referral at a General Medical Center: Retrospective Cohort Study
Reika IKI ; Emiko SAITO ; Nobuko WADA ; Hirohito TAKATA ; Mariko SHINOMIYA ; Masatoshi SHIMADA ; Masako TANAKA ; Chinami YOSHIZUMI ; Hiroaki SAKAI ; Yuki KATAOKA
Palliative Care Research 2021;16(1):93-98
Purpose: Distress screening is mandated by Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare of Japan, however there is few data available on its effect in actual practice. We examined the impact of distress screening on palliative care referral at Hyogo Prefectural Amagasaki General Medical Center in Japan. Materials and Methods: We implemented distress screening on cancer patients who were given chemotherapy from February 2018. Patients were referred to the palliative care team when the physicians judged the need on the basis of the screening results or when the patients themselves wanted to receive the palliative care service. We examined the number of the patients referred to the palliative care team, then we researched the changes of the number after implementation of the screening, using the regression discontinuity analysis. Results: The distress screening didn’t increase the number of the patients who were referred to the palliative care team: the estimated difference of the number was 3.32 (95% confidence interval: −3.19〜9.82). Conclusion: We implemented distress screening at our hospital but it didn’t increase palliative care referral. Only a few studies have examined how routine screening impacts clinical outcomes. We expect our study helps to research the effectiveness of screening in each healthcare facility.