1.Medical education for company employees by Osaka University:
Kenji Watabe ; Masafumi Wasa ; Yuichi Yoshida ; Tetsuo Takehara
Medical Education 2014;45(1):38-42
Background: A nonprofit organization―the Supporting Center for Clinical Research and Education—has outsourced medical education to the Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine. The main targets of this education are researchers and developers in pharmaceutical and medical-equipment companies.
Method: Since 2004, the Supporting Center for Clinical Research and Education has provided short, intensive seminars on 25 subjects to 214 company employees. The key components of the seminars are lectures, practice, case conferences, interviews with patients, and comprehensive discussions.
Results: After each seminar was completed, it was evaluated with questionnaires filled out by participants. Participants expressed high levels of satisfaction with all components of the seminars, with interviews with patients being the most highly rated.
Conclusions: Medical educational activities for company employees have increased in recent years. These seminars are intended to provide short, intensive, small-group instruction to researchers and developers in pharmaceutical and medical-equipment companies with a goal of patient-centered medical practice based on a proper understanding of the actual condition of patients.
2.Pain from Right Lateral Epicondylitis Successfully Treated with Uyakujunkisan : A Case Report
Takuya HAMAGUCHI ; Tetsuhiro YOSHINO ; Yuko HORIBA ; Hirobumi YOSHIDA ; Kenji WATANABE
Kampo Medicine 2016;67(1):50-53
Typically, Japanese Kampo doctors use formulas classified for treating blood stasis, to treat pain. However,there have been few reported cases where pain was treated with formulas classified for treating qi stagnation. Here, we report a case of right lateral epicondylitis in a 48-year-old woman who was treated with a focus on qi stagnation and with uyakujunkisan. She underwent conservative treatment at an orthopedic clinic for ten months, but her pain was not relieved. Hence, she opted for Kampo treatment. She was in a state of melancholy, felt heaviness throughout her body, and had irregular menstruation. These symptoms were mainly related to qi stagnation, and hence, we chose uyakujunkisan without white silkworm, but with aconite root. One month later, the stiffness in her shoulder improved and the pain was reduced. Magnetic resonance imaging taken 2 months later showed an improvement in the lesion. Nine months later, her menstruation became regular, and 11 months later, the pain had almost completely resolved and she could comfortably perform activities of daily living. Uyakujunkisan is introduced in the classical textbooks, and we interpret uyakujunkisan as a formula that can treat pain with qi stagnation. In Kampo treatment, effective pain treatment involves consideration of not only local blood stasis but also general qi stagnation.
3.Education in Primary Care in a Specific Functional Hospital: Postgraduate Medical Training in the Department of Emergency Medicine Covering a Wide Range of Medical Fields Dealing With Patients With First- to Third-Level Emergencies.
Hiroyuki KATO ; Seimyo YOSHIDA ; Nobuo BABA ; Hisashi KAWABUCHI ; Takachika ITOH ; Kazuhisa OOGUSHI ; Kenji HIRAHARA ; Kenji TAKI ; Katsuji HORI ; Takeharu HISATSUGU
Medical Education 1999;30(6):419-423
A university hospital plays roles as a specific functional hospital and as a teaching hospital in primary care because most medical school graduates receive basic clinical training in this area. An important objective of primary care education for all residents is the initial treatment of patients with first-to third-level emergencies. We examined the number of patients, the level of emergency (first, second, and third level) and the diagnoses that each resident encountered. Subjects included 29 residents (3 in the first year, 4 in the second year, and 2 in the third year) who had undergone clinical training for 3 months in the department of emergency medicine at the Saga Medical School Hospital which treats 7, 000 to 8, 000 patients per year with first-to third-level emergencies. Residents were involved with 214.6 emergency cases, which included approximately 59 types of first-level emergency, 31 types of second-level emergency, and 15 types of third-level emergencies. These results were largely compatible with the Objectives of Postgraduate Basic Clinical Training proposed by the Japan Society for Medical Education. These results show that university hospitals as specific functional hospitals should accept numerous emergency patients and that residents must receive clinical training in emergency medicine to achieve the objectives of primary care education.
4.Strengthened tuberculosis control programme and trend of multidrug resistant tuberculosis rate in Osaka City, Japan
Shimouchi Akira ; Ohkado Akihiro ; Matsumoto Kenji ; Komukai Jun ; Yoshida Hideki ; Ishikawa Nobukatsu
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2013;4(1):4-10
Osaka City has the highest tuberculosis (TB) notification rates in Japan. In the period 1999–2003, the TB control programme was strengthened, and the Stop TB Strategy was implemented to reduce the number of notified cases. The objective of this study was to assess the effect of these control activities in Osaka City, including the implementation of directly observed treatment (DOT), by analysing TB surveillance and routinely collected data. We reviewed the surveillance data of all sputum smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) cases registered in the Osaka City Public Health Office from 2001 to 2008 and data collected from the routine TB programme. The DOT implementation rate increased from 0% in 2001 to 68% in 2008 for smear-positive PTB cases of the general public and to 61% for all PTB cases of the homeless. The proportion of smear-positive PTB cases that had treatment failure and default combined, declined from 8.0% (52 of 650) in 2001 to 3.6% (20 of 548) in 2006. The proportion of cases among the homeless with previous treatment declined from 28% in 2001 to 15% in 2008. The proportion of cases with multidrug resistant-TB (MDR-TB) among those without previous treatment declined from 1.7% in 2001 to 0.9% in 2008. It is logical that reduction in the failure and default rate would lead to the reduction of cases with previous treatment and TB transmission, including resistant TB, therefore to the reduction of MDR-TB rates.
5.Actual conditions of the health care of school personnel in rural districts of Shimane prefecture, Japan.
Tomoko SHIMIZU ; Kenji ABE ; Tetsuhito FUKUSHIMA ; Akio NAKAGAWA ; Nobuo YOSHIDA ; Yosuke YAMANE
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1984;33(4):775-779
Actual conditions of the health care of school personnel in rural districts of Shimane Prefecture were investigated, concentrating our attention on the structure of diseases, the contents of health examination, factors impeding health, and so forth.
As a result of our investigation we found that the incidence of adult diseases among school personnel is considerably high. Health examinations with complete contents should be practised in the near future.
Further, the establishment of health care system in the work place, the improvement of working conditions considering sufficiently the peculiarity of mental work and of femininity, the independence of school nurses as specialist should be realized on the basis of the understanding of actual problems, which are obtained by examinations of health care conditions at each work place including epidemiological examination.
6.A study of current primary health care in rural district, Japan - Problmes of community-based school health.
Kenji ABE ; Tetsuhito FUKUSHIMA ; Akio NAKAGAWA ; Nobuo YOSHIDA ; Tomoko TAGAWA ; Yosuke YAMANE
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1986;35(2):165-171
The recent urbanization of rural communities and the associated changes of the living environments influenced the health conditions of children in rural districts of Shimane Prefecture, Japan. It obliged therefore to review the usual school health approach and to evaluate the care system to new trends of critical health problems of children.
A questionnaire was sent to school nurses asking their worries and problems about each step of the scientific school health procedure to recognize the health needs, to analyse the health problems, to plan the appropriate counterplans, to practice and to evaluate.
As a result of our investigations, the following remedies were necessary for the development of rural school health activities.
Firstly, the specialization of school nurses should be established without delay, and their working conditions should be more improved.
Secondary, school nurses should strengthen the contacts with teachers, parents and other school staffs to organize the developed school health system.
Finally, school nurses should make their efforts to delop the community-based school health care which connected the comprehensive community health care.
7.Community study of the integration of health care, medical care and social welfare systems for the elderly. Fundamental analysis of the aging of population in Shimane prefecture, Japan.
Kenji ABE ; Tetsuhito FUKUSHIMA ; Yoneatsu OSAKI ; Akio NAKAGAWA ; Nobuo YOSHIDA ; Yosuke YAMANE ; Eisaku TANIGUCHI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1987;35(5):867-874
In order to develop the health care system for the elderly we need to analyse fundamentally the phenomenon that the average age of population in each community is rapidly becoming older, as well as we have to grasp life conditions and health needs of old people. We investigated the rate of increase or decrease of population, rate of the elderly living by themselves and the index of the aging of population of each community, classified these communities into several types, and presented the points necessary to develop a community-based comprehensive health care for the elderly as to each type by considering the meanings the indices of health care, medical care and social welfare of the communities disclose.
8.Community study of the development of primary health care in the agricultural district, Japan. The educational practice and its problems of preventive medicine to the medical students.
Kenji ABE ; Tetsuhito FUKUSHIMA ; Yoneatsu OSAKI ; Akio NAKAGAWA ; Nobuo YOSHIDA ; Yosuke YAMANE
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1987;35(5):875-880
Recently, while the medical technology developed remarkably on the one hand, the soscial need for preventive medicine largely increased on the other. In Japan, it is an urgent problem of the medical education how to create effective methodology and technology of the preventive medicine that can attract students who generally prefer to become professionals in clinical medicine.
Since 1978 we have practiced an educational programme in which each student looks after one family picked up from the agricultural district for one year, caring for the health of the family members and helping them out of health problems, if there are any. In this way students can learn primary health care and community health of their own will.
Compared with the traditional method, this method is effective in making the students understand with real interest the meanings of comprehensive primary health care through concerning themselves in the health care of a family as “a socio-economical-psycho-complex”.
9.A study on primary health care in a rural community. Generation differences in nutrition and improvements in the dietary life.
Yosuke YAMANE ; Nobuo YOSHIDA ; Akio NAKAGAWA ; Kenji ABE ; Tetsuhito FUKUSHIMA ; Yoneatsu OSAKI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1987;36(2):106-115
In a farm village of Shimane Prefecture we conducted an investigation on the difference of nutrition between young, middle-aged and old generations. The result showed that nutrition was below the necessary level in the old generation, with many foods being scantily taken. Irrespective of generation the diet was of Japanese style. It will be necessary to guide people to the improvement of dietary life according to generations.
The dietary life of bedridden people and of those who attend to them was the worst of all. Some social measures to improve the situation, as well as the repletion of primary health care for old people are urgently required.
Women in rural communities generally have concrete demands for improvement of the dietary life. It is important to carry out the improvement in harmony with the actual condition of life in the community and the demand of inhabitants.
10.Shoulder Joint Motion Analysis of Daily Living Activities Using a Global Coordinate System
Yukiya INOUE ; Mayumi KIHARA ; Junko YOSHIMURA ; Naoki YOSHIDA ; Kenji MATSUMOTO ; Tomosaburo SAKAMOTO ; Kazuhisa DOMEN
The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine 2013;50(10):840-844
Objective : With clinical application in mind, we developed a method to measure the movement of a selected joint three-dimensionally as a conic domain (joint sinus cone). The method was applied to shoulder joint motion during daily living activities exercises in a group of hemiparetic poststroke patients. The results were compared to the exercise range of physically unimpaired persons. Methods : The subjects dressed in jackets and performed certain other tasks in a sitting position and the range of motion of the shoulder joint in three dimensions was measured using a 6-dimensional electromagnetic tracking system. Measurement results were analyzed with a plane display using a Lambert Azimuthal equal area. Results : This method was able to determine findings difficult to see with the naked eye, such as the narrow range of motion in a paralyzed shoulder joint and poor functionality also in the contralateral shoulder. Conclusion : The dressing measurement was achieved using magnetic measurement equipment. By displaying the results through a map projection it was possible to appreciate the whole range of the motion. Because this method facilitates the expression of complex joint exercise ranges, it will be useful in the analysis of daily behavior restrictions due to impairment.