1.Medical Student-led Activities to Listen to Patients' Narratives and Laugh at Each Other
Ryuichiro NISHIOKA ; Moe KURODA ; Kaku KURODA
An Official Journal of the Japan Primary Care Association 2023;46(2):78-80
We organized regular, student-led activities in which medical students listened to patients' narratives and engaged in casual conversation. This report reviews these activities, which were conducted 28 times between June 2020 and September 2022. Through the activities, we received feedback on feelings, new perspectives, and realizations that arose from both students and patients. Our findings suggest that listening to patients' narratives helped students self-reflect and understand the patients' perspectives. Moreover, interacting with students helped patients feel a sense of meaning and a new understanding of their illness.
2.Quality Improvement and Reflection on Inter-professional Moral Case Deliberation Using the REFLECT Rubric, and Promotion of Reflection Skills
Kaku KURODA ; Makoto OURA ; Taro MIURA ; Naoko KOBAYASHI ; Fumiko WATANABE ; Moe KURODA ; Keiichiro KITA
An Official Journal of the Japan Primary Care Association 2021;44(2):97-100
This study examined and improved the quality of inter-professional moral case deliberation (MCD) in a home-based medical care clinic by altering the MCD process and evaluating it using the REFLECT rubric. After altering the MCD process, four of the five main evaluation items in the questionnaire were shifted to a higher evaluation level employing a scaled evaluation. The free-entry field revealed future tasks. This report suggested that improving the quality and assessment of MCD using REFLECT promotes the reflection skills of clinical teams.
3.Report on the Toronto International Program to Strengthen Family Medicine and Primary Care
Kaku KURODA ; Moe KURODA ; Yosuke SHIMIZU ; Daishi OGAWA ; Makoto OURA ; Naoko KOBAYASHI ; Seiji YAMASHIRO
An Official Journal of the Japan Primary Care Association 2020;43(1):29-31
We participated in TIPS-FM (Toronto International Program to Strengthen Family Medicine and Primary Care) for two weeks in Toronto in June 2019. This program enabled us to learn many important factors for developing family medicine. Based on Canadian family medicine, which has a long history, we were able to review the missions of family medicine in Japan, and gained further insight into multilayered essentials on the patient-, community-, and global-levels.
4.A Questionnaire Survey of Primary Care Physicians on Dialects in the Hokushinetsu Region -A Quantitative and Qualitative Study of Dialects and Physicians' Perceptions-
Keiichiro KITA ; Yoshiaki TAKASE ; Mayuko SAITO ; Moe KURODA ; Kaku KURODA ; Maiko KUROIWA ; Seiji YAMASHIRO
An Official Journal of the Japan Primary Care Association 2021;44(4):147-156
Introduction: Primary care (PC) physicians often struggle with the local dialects of patients, especially when they work away from their hometowns.Method: We conducted a questionnaire survey of PC physicians in the Hokushinetsu region, the northcentral part of Honshu island of Japan, to understand how doctors recognize and deal with local dialects in their daily clinical practice.We also analyzed their comments qualitatively using the Steps for Coding and Theorization (SCAT) method.Results: Thirty-one physicians (21 men and 10 women) completed the questionnaire. Of the total, 71% of respondents worked away from their hometowns.Moreover, 81.8% of these respondents stated they had difficulties understanding the dialect spoken in the region of their workplaces and 36.3% misunderstood the meanings of the dialect spoken by their local patients as a result. Respondents often heard "ui" or "tekinai" as the chief complaints of local patients, and interpreted these words as physical symptoms such as fatigue, dyspnea, and abdominal distension. SCAT analysis suggested that these words can have different meanings depending on the context. PC physicians translate them into medical terms using paraphrasing techniques based on each patient's medical history. Furthermore, PC physicians use dialects according to their relationship with the patient.Conclusion: Understanding the characteristics of these dialects and using them appropriately may improve the doctor-patient relationship.
5.Peripheral neuropathy induced by drinking water contaminated with low-dose arsenic in Myanmar.
Hitoshi MOCHIZUKI ; Khin Phyu PHYU ; Myo Nanda AUNG ; Phyo Wai ZIN ; Yasunori YANO ; Moe Zaw MYINT ; Win Min THIT ; Yuka YAMAMOTO ; Yoshitaka HISHIKAWA ; Kyaw Zin THANT ; Masugi MARUYAMA ; Yoshiki KURODA
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2019;24(1):23-23
BACKGROUND:
More than 140 million people drink arsenic-contaminated groundwater. It is unknown how much arsenic exposure is necessary to cause neurological impairment. Here, we evaluate the relationship between neurological impairments and the arsenic concentration in drinking water (ACDW).
PARTICIPANTS AND METHODS:
A cross-sectional study design was employed. We performed medical examinations of 1867 residents in seven villages in the Thabaung township in Myanmar. Medical examinations consisted of interviews regarding subjective neurological symptoms and objective neurological examinations of sensory disturbances. For subjective neurological symptoms, we ascertained the presence or absence of defects in smell, vision, taste, and hearing; the feeling of weakness; and chronic numbness or pain. For objective sensory disturbances, we examined defects in pain sensation, vibration sensation, and two-point discrimination. We analyzed the relationship between the subjective symptoms, objective sensory disturbances, and ACDW.
RESULTS:
Residents with ACDW ≥ 10 parts per billion (ppb) had experienced a "feeling of weakness" and "chronic numbness or pain" significantly more often than those with ACDW < 10 ppb. Residents with ACDW ≥ 50 ppb had three types of sensory disturbances significantly more often than those with ACDW < 50 ppb. In children, there was no significant association between symptoms or signs and ACDW.
CONCLUSION
Subjective symptoms, probably due to peripheral neuropathy, occurred at very low ACDW (around 10 ppb). Objective peripheral nerve disturbances of both small and large fibers occurred at low ACDW (> 50 ppb). These data suggest a threshold for the occurrence of peripheral neuropathy due to arsenic exposure, and indicate that the arsenic concentration in drinking water should be less than 10 ppb to ensure human health.
Adolescent
;
Adult
;
Arsenic
;
analysis
;
toxicity
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Dietary Exposure
;
adverse effects
;
Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
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Drinking Water
;
adverse effects
;
chemistry
;
Female
;
Groundwater
;
chemistry
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Myanmar
;
epidemiology
;
Peripheral Nervous System Diseases
;
chemically induced
;
epidemiology
;
physiopathology
;
Sensation Disorders
;
chemically induced
;
epidemiology
;
physiopathology
;
Water Pollutants, Chemical
;
analysis
;
toxicity
;
Young Adult