1.Future Image of Toyota Kosei Hospital
Kimie KAMIYA ; Norihiko SUZUKI ; Naoyuki KATADA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2015;63(5):753-757
In Toyota where our hospital plays a role of a municipal health provider, population will increase slightly, but aging will quickly progress in coming 20 years. In this paper, we envisaged the picture of future health services to be provided by our hospital based on the age-specific population movement date by the five-year age categories in the “Regional Population Projection for Japan: 2010-2040”, which was worked out on trial by the National Institute of Population and Social Security Research. The population was divided into four ranks, “juvenile”, “production-age”, “young-old”, and “old-old”. We assessed the types of prevailing disease in the year 2025 when the ages of all baby boomers are expected to exceed 75 years. The population in Toyota will slightly decrease along with a decrease in the number of people in juvenile and production-age ranks until 2035. In contrast, the population of those in the young-old and the old-old group population ranks will increase by 1.2 times and 2.4 times, respectively. Since about 12% of the old-old group is expected to be inpatients of our hospital, with the increase in the old-old group, the number of the patient to be discharged from our hospital will also increase. In the year 2025 when the number of obstetrics patients as well as new born infants will decrease in proportion to the reduction in the population. On the other hand, all types of neoplasm, cardiovascular disease, digestive disease, respiratory disease, and injury, which are common in the old-old group, will increase. Given that almost 80% of the patients discharged from our hospital are Toyota residents, the total number of patients to be discharged from our hospital in 2025 could be 20,000. When the average length of hospital stay in 2012 is applied to calculate the rate of the hospital bed occupancy rate, it would be 105% in 2025. It means that shortage of sickbeds will occur in our hospital. To cope with their problem, it will be necessary to shoten the length of hospitalization.
2.A Study of the Significance and Problems of Learning About Nursing in Medical Education from Nurses' Point of View.
Yoko EMORI ; Katsuko KAMIYA ; Shigeo TOMURA ; Hisako YANAGI ; Yoko AKAZAWA ; Kimie SUZUKI ; Mihoko AIKAWA ; Aiko MIKATA
Medical Education 2001;32(6):433-437
Although attempts to teach medical students about nursing have become more frequent, nurses who have lectured to medical students and have been involved in their practical training have rarely published studies evaluating their training methods and objectives. This study was performed to clarify the significance and problems of such teaching. Nurses now participate in the education and training of medical students in at least half of medical training hospitals and schools. They thought that this is a unique and beneficial educational opportunity and had high expectations. However, four main problems have been identified: the motivation and attitudes of medical students, the time and environment for training, the understanding of clinicians, and the problems of nurses, such as lack of educational experience.