1.Association between daily physical activity and neighborhood environments.
Kanae KONDO ; Jung Su LEE ; Kiyoshi KAWAKUBO ; Yusuke KATAOKA ; Yasushi ASAMI ; Katsumi MORI ; Masahiro UMEZAKI ; Taro YAMAUCHI ; Hirofumi TAKAGI ; Hiroshi SUNAGAWA ; Akira AKABAYASHI
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2009;14(3):196-206
OBJECTIVEPrevious studies on the association between physical activity (PA) and neighborhood environments (NE) focused on either objectively measuring the NE or the residents' perception of NE. Here, we investigate which actual or perceived NE is associated with residents' PA in Japan.
METHODSTwo regions with an objectively assessed high and low residential density, land use mix-diversity, and street connectivity, respectively, were identified in one city. The subjects were selected using a stratified random sampling method by sex and age in each region. The NE of the subjects was objectively measured using the Geographic Information System (GIS), and the subjects' perception of the NE was assessed using a questionnaire. The daily total number of walking steps was measured with an accelerometer, and walking and cycling time were assessed by a questionnaire.
RESULTSFor the female subjects, the mean cycling time, subjectively assessed as a means of transport, was significantly longer in the group with a high GIS score for the number of land use types, while the score for total number of walking steps was significantly higher among those who were aware of places to walk to, and cycling time for transport was longer for those who perceived an accessibility to post offices, banks/credit unions, gymnasiums/fitness facilities, and amusement facilities in their neighborhood. For the male subjects, the score for walking time for leisure was longer for those who perceived aesthetics and an accessibility to parks, and the score for total walking steps was significantly higher for those who perceived an accessibility to bookstores or rental video stores in their neighborhood.
CONCLUSIONSThe results to this study demonstrate that daily PA was high among female subjects living in a NE with land use mix-diversity, and who had an awareness of places to walk to and the accessibility to facilities for daily necessities in their neighborhood. For male subjects, daily PA was high among those who perceived the aesthetics of and accessibility to facilities for pleasure in their neighborhood. Further research is needed to determine the association between PA and NE on the basis of sex differences.
2.Training of Clinical Technologists to Support Assisted Reproductive Technology Services at Our Hospital
Yasuo ITO ; Jun ICHIKAWA ; Hidemi TSUGA ; Akari ASAMI ; Yuka HAYASHI ; Yasushi MATSUKAWA ; Kazuhiro HIGUCHI ; Naoko NISHIMURA ; Masahiko SOUDA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2025;73(6):613-619
Since 2005, one of our clinical technologists has been involved in providing assisted reproductive technology (ART) services ranging from egg retrieval to embryo transfer, which were previously performed only by doctors at our hospital. In 2011, the clinical technologist was certified as a clinical embryologist by the Japanese Society of Clinical Embryologists. Around 2020, insurance coverage for ART related to infertility treatment began to be considered. Consequently, the training and development of ART-supporting clinical technologists became an urgent issue. In response, we developed a training program for ART-supporting clinical technologists that covers egg retrieval assistance, fertilization, culture, embryo freezing/thawing, and embryo transfer. By the end of fiscal year 2022, we had successfully trained two new ARTsupporting clinical technologists, bringing the total to three.