1.A Trial of Evidence-Based Medicine in Clinical Clerkships in a Department of Hygiene and Public Health.
Noriko KOJIMAHARA ; Takahiro OKAMOTO ; Jun KAGAWA
Medical Education 2000;31(2):113-118
Our school of medicine began a new curriculum for medical students in April of 1999. In their final year medical students are allowed to schedule a 3-month clinical clerkship. This clerkship gives the students three 4-week periods to do rotations in their areas of interest. Our clinics have had a hard time finding the time to teach students evidence-based medicine (EBM) owing to their clinical workloads. Even when the divisions want to teach EBM there are few resources available for the students. Therefore, students are sometimes unable to receive adequate training in EBM. With the introduction of the new curriculum the Department of Hygiene and Public Health thought that the clinical clerkship program offered a good opportunity to teach students EBM with a one-to-one student-teacher relationship. We report here on our preliminary program that uses a scenario approach to EBM education. We determined the students' level of development by studying the detailed progress reports written by their teachers. The students were found to understand EBM when presented with its basic concepts which are then used in multiple discussions. Students will continue to use self-directed learning throughout their careers if they learn to think using EBM early in their training and practice it during their residency. We also show here a worksheet based on the Journal of the American Medical Association User's Guide series to use systematic EBM in daily clinics. Our program is just one of several methods we hope to develop to educate medical students in EBM.
2.Factors Related to Dizziness/vertigo Experienced by Elderly People in Their Daily Lives -Assessment of Effect Size Using Meta-analysis-
Akihiro ARAKI ; Hitomi MATSUDA ; Noriko OKAMOTO ; Toshifumi TAKAO ; Naoki MAKI ; Georg Von FINGERHUT ; Xiaochen WANG
An Official Journal of the Japan Primary Care Association 2020;43(3):82-89
Introduction: This study used a meta-analysis to investigate factors related to dizziness/vertigo and their effect size in community-dwelling elderly people.Methods: The search terms "elderly," "dizzy," "community dwelling," and others were used, and a database search was conducted using Ichushi Web and PubMed.Result: In total, 10 studies were extracted. Meta-analysis calculated 28 items as significantly related factors: anxiety, fatigue, taking nitric acid drugs, taking anxiolytics, low self-rated health, memory impairment, depression, sleep disorder, dementia, cancer, balance failure, gait disturbance, physical dysfunction, taking diuretics, living alone, heart disease, fall history, rheumatoid arthritis, stroke, taking sleeping pills, taking multiple drugs, visual impairment, female, ADL impairment, osteoporosis, taking antihypertensive drugs, hypertension, and low education level.Conclusion: The above items may be key variables for investigating dizziness/vertigo in the future.
3.Physicians' Awareness Regarding Evidence-based Medicine, Practice Guidelines and Clinical Information Resources in Japan
Toshihiko Satoh ; Takeo Nakayama ; Yasuto Sato ; Keika Hoshi ; Koichi Miyaki ; Noriko Kojimahara ; Narumi Eguchi ; Takahiro Okamoto ; Yoko Hayashi ; Naohito Yamaguchi
General Medicine 2004;5(1):13-20
BACKGROUND: physicians' awareness regarding evidence-based medicine (EBM), clinical practice guidelines, and clinical information resources were rarely examined in Japan. We need to know them prior to the initiation of the Medical Information Network Distribution Service (Minds) by the Japan Council for Quality Health Care (JCQHC) .
METHODS: A total of 10, 000 directors/owners of private clinics (CDs: clinic physicians) affiliated with the Japan Medical Association (JMA) and 8682 physicians working for hospitals certified by the JCQHC (HDs: hospital physicians) were randomly selected and surveyed by a mailed questionnaire.
RESULTS: The response rate to the questionnaire was 18.7% (n=1865) among CDs and 67.8% (n=5885) among HDs. The percentage of respondents who uses internet was 39.9% among CDs and 69.3% among HDs. The information resource most commonly used by all respondents was medical journals, followed by textbooks. The percentage of respondents who used medical literature database was 10.8% among CDs and 49.7% among HDs, respectively. Approximately 80% of all respondents approved implementing EBM in daily practice. Fifty percent of all respondents indicated to have used clinical practice guidelines, and 90% of all the guideline users replied that clinical practice guidelines are useful tools for clinical decision-making. Over half of HDs required to access to the abstracts of the literature cited in the guidelines.
CONCLUSIONS: Many physicians who responded to the survey acknowledged that EBM will contribute to improving the quality of medical services. They are positive in using clinical practice guidelines that include a series of recommendations proposed by specialists in the relevant field (s) in accordance to the reviewed evidence.
4.Preferred Information Media for Providing Clinical Practice Guidelines to Physicians in Japan : A Needs Assessment Study by the Medical Information Network Distribution Service (Minds)
Yasuto Sato ; Takeo Nakayama ; Toshihiko Satoh ; Keika Hoshi ; Noriko Kojimahara ; Koichi Miyaki ; Narumi Eguchi ; Takahiro Okamoto ; Yoko Hayashi ; Naohito Yamaguchi
General Medicine 2006;7(2):45-52
BACKGROUND: The purpose of our study was to compare the characteristics of medical practitioners who prefer using the Internet as their information resource and those who prefer using printed materials.
METHODS: From December 2002 to January 2003, a non-anonymous questionnaire was sent out by post to members of the Japanese Medical Association (JMA) and physicians working in hospitals. Contributing factors were examined by using logistic regression analysis.
RESULTS: The response rates for the questionnaires were 18.7% (n=1868) for JMA physicians and 68.0% (n=5901) for hospital physicians. Factors associated with the preference for using the Internet were: ‘younger age’; ‘use of the Internet to solve clinical problems and uncertainties’; ‘use of personal computers at work’; and, ‘use of personal computers at home’.
CONCLUSION: The results of this study show that, although some younger physicians prefer printed materials, providing medical information via the Internet is better suited for younger physicians who are making full use of computers. In contrast, older physicians prefer printed materials because they tend to be less familiar with using computers and may have limited accessibility to the Internet. Therefore, using both the Internet and printed materials to provide medical information is necessary to meet the needs of the larger physician population.
5.Effects of a Communication Program in Undergraduate Medical Education on Physician's Clinical Practice.
Tatsuro ISHIZAKI ; Yuichi IMANAKA ; Akihiro OKAMOTO ; Hisashi OKUYAMA ; Yasuaki KAMANO ; Takahiro KIUCHI ; Satoshi GOTO ; Takeshi TANIGAWA ; Takeo NAKAYAMA ; Satoshi HONJO ; Shunsaku MIZUSHIMA ; Noriko MURAKAMI
Medical Education 1998;29(6):399-406
This study examined the effectiveness of a communication program in undergraduate medical education in improving communication in physicians' clinical practice. The effectiveness of the program was assessed with a mail survey using self-rated questionnaires 9 years later. Ninety participants were follwed up in late 1994; 57.8% of them replied to the questionnaire. Of the respondents, 60% replied that programs concerned with active listening and role-playing had benefits on communicating with patients and families. In addition, 40% of respondents answered that case studies aimed at teaching comprehensive medicine with the team approach was effective in improving communication with co-medical staff. These results suggest that the communication program in undergraduate medical education is effective in improving clinical communication in clinical practice when students are highly motivated.
6.The neutrophil-osteogenic cell axis promotes bone destruction in periodontitis
Ando YUTARO ; Tsukasaki MASAYUKI ; Huynh Cong-Nhat NAM ; Zang SHIZAO ; Yan MINGLU ; Muro RYUNOSUKE ; Nakamura KAZUTAKA ; Komagamine MASATSUGU ; Komatsu NORIKO ; Okamoto KAZUO ; Nakano KENTA ; Okamura TADASHI ; Yamaguchi AKIRA ; Ishihara KAZUYUKI ; Takayanagi HIROSHI
International Journal of Oral Science 2024;16(1):154-162
The immune-stromal cell interactions play a key role in health and diseases.In periodontitis,the most prevalent infectious disease in humans,immune cells accumulate in the oral mucosa and promote bone destruction by inducing receptor activator of nuclear factor-κB ligand(RANKL)expression in osteogenic cells such as osteoblasts and periodontal ligament cells.However,the detailed mechanism underlying immune-bone cell interactions in periodontitis is not fully understood.Here,we performed single-cell RNA-sequencing analysis on mouse periodontal lesions and showed that neutrophil-osteogenic cell crosstalk is involved in periodontitis-induced bone loss.The periodontal lesions displayed marked infiltration of neutrophils,and in silico analyses suggested that the neutrophils interacted with osteogenic cells through cytokine production.Among the cytokines expressed in the periodontal neutrophils,oncostatin M(OSM)potently induced RANKL expression in the primary osteoblasts,and deletion of the OSM receptor in osteogenic cells significantly ameliorated periodontitis-induced bone loss.Epigenomic data analyses identified the OSM-regulated RANKL enhancer region in osteogenic cells,and mice lacking this enhancer showed decreased periodontal bone loss while maintaining physiological bone metabolism.These findings shed light on the role of neutrophils in bone regulation during bacterial infection,highlighting the novel mechanism underlying osteoimmune crosstalk.
7.The interaction effect between physical and cultural leisure activities on the subsequent decline of instrumental ADL: the Fujiwara-kyo study.
Masayo KOMATSU ; Kenji OBAYASHI ; Kimiko TOMIOKA ; Masayuki MORIKAWA ; Noriko JOJIMA ; Nozomi OKAMOTO ; Norio KURUMATANI ; Keigo SAEKI
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2019;24(1):71-71
BACKGROUND:
Maintenance of instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) and social role (SR) is crucial to keep independent life because the decline in SR and IADL was a significant predictor of dependence in basic ADL in later. The independent effect of physical and cultural leisure activities and their effect modification on the IADL remains unknown.
METHODS:
We prospectively observed 3241 elderly with intact IADL at baseline for 5 years. Higher level functional capacity such as IADL and SR was assessed using the Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology Index of competence (TMIG index).
RESULTS:
The mean age of the participants was 72.3 years (standard deviation 5.1), and 46.9% were male, and 90.9% of them received a follow-up assessment. Of the participants, 10.4% developed an IADL decline. Engagement in leisure physical activity was associated with a significantly lower risk of IADL decline (adjusted risk ratio, 0.73; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.60 to 0.89), and cultural leisure activity was also associated with lower risk of IADL decline (adjusted risk ratio, 0.77; 95% CI, 0.63 to 0.95) independent of potential confounders. We also found significant and positive interaction between physical and cultural leisure activities at risk for IADL decline (P = 0.024) and SR decline (P = 0.004).
CONCLUSIONS
We found an independent association of physical and cultural leisure activities with a lower risk for functional decline in IADL and SR with positive interaction. Combined engagement in physical and cultural activities may effectively prevent from IADL decline and SR decline.