1.Transportation Service by Medical Institution in Mountainous Areas
Yoji TAKIZAWA ; Masashi SUGIURA ; Yoshio SHIRAI ; Keiichiro GOTO ; Tomihiro HAYAKAWA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2014;62(5):745-749
Mountainous areas facing such demographic problems as depopulation and aging, have yet to get over difficulties in securing a means of transportation for people to visit medical facilities. Asuke Hospital, located in a mountainous district of Mikawa, Aichi Prefecture, has worked on the project to improve living conditions for years with a view to laying the foundations for the inhabitants to continue to lead a healthy life. As part of the project, we started shuttle services on a trial basis in 2010 and 2011. As a result, we reaffirmed that there was a pressing need of door-to-door services on the part of patients and members of their families. It was also made clear that, if transportation services are to be an economically feasible project, there must be more users and that users would have to pay a certain amount of money as a fare on the user-pays principle.
2.Pharmaceutical Care to a Patient with Dysphagia Who Needs Gefitinib Chemotherapy
Satoru MASE ; Eiji YONEYAMA ; Kazumasa NEGITA ; Yoji SUGIURA ; Takanori MIURA ; Akio KATSUMI ; Toru HARA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2008;57(1):28-33
Recently, in order to make chemotherapy, safer and more effective various forms of intervention by pharmacists are needed. In this paper, we report our experience in intervening in the administration of gefitinib to a patient with dysphagia. Chemotherapy with an intravenous drip injection to the 58 year-old woman admitted to our hospital for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) was withdrawn due to severe pancytopenia after the first cycle of pharamcotherapy. Then, as an altermative, oral medication, of gefitinib was suggested by medical doctors. However, the oral administration was inappropriate to the condition of the patient. She was unable to keep taking gefitinib pills because she had been suffering from a progressive swallowing disturbance due to progressive non-small cell lung cancer. Thus, we proposed another oral administration method in which gefitinib was resuspended in thickening agents. This method made it possible for the patient to take gefitinib without any adverse events until the day before the patient died.
Patients
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Chemotherapy-Oncologic Procedure
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Non-small cell lung cancer
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Deglutition Disorders
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Needs
3.Intervention by PCT and Problems Awaiting Solution at Anjo Kosei Hospital: Usefulness of Rounds of Patients Receiving Opioids
Kazuyuki NAKAMURA ; Takanori MIURA ; Hiroyuki MANSHIO ; Eiji YONEYAMA ; Yoji SUGIURA ; Akio KATSUMI ; Mika SHIMADA ; Akiko OGINO ; Tomoko KOIKE ; Mamiko TAKEUCHI ; Yoriyuki NAKAMURA ; Yoshitaka ONO ; Jinwoo LEE
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2012;61(1):8-15
In order to intervene in the management of pain of cancer from an early stage. Our palliative care team (PCT), including pharmacists, makes the ward rounds (screening rounds) of the patients receiving opioids at our hospital. The purpose of this study was to analyze the effects of screening rounds activity by the PCT and its current problems, and to explore how to resolve the problems. We retrospectively studied the records of 196 patients who had receivede interventions by the PCT, with regard to intervention status and prescription proposal (228 subjects) about drug therapy by us. Study groups were as follows: 103 patients to whom interventions were deliveed at the request of medical doctors (intervention request group) and 93 patients who had interventions by the PCT after PCT-screening rounds (screening group). PCT-screening rounds caused to increase the number of interventions by the PCT. After PCT-screening rounds, the cases of intervention started by the request of medical doctors, who had given no heed to PCT intervention, also increased in numher. In this study, some problems with palliative intervention were also brought to light. Even in the screening group where the PCT largely intervened, 33% of prescription proposal by the PCT was ignored. This problem may be, at least in part, due to inadequate communication between PCT and ward staff through an electronic medical recording card, leading to poor relationship between PCT and ward staff. In the future, the PCT needs to work cooperatively with ward staff through direct communication such as medical conference to perform better intervention.
4.A Case Report on Effect of Asenapine Sublingual Tablets on Intractable Nausea in a Patient of Terminal Malignant Lymphoma with Diabetes Who Cannot Take Oral Medicine
Hiroyuki WATANABE ; Kazuyuki NAKAMURA ; Ayumi ISHIKAWA ; Jinwoo LEE ; Yasunori ADACHI ; Toshitaka NABESHIMA ; Yoji SUGIURA
Palliative Care Research 2021;16(2):133-138
Introduction: We report a case of intractable nausea of a terminal malignant lymphoma patient with diabetes, which improved by sublingual administration of asenapine. Case: A 78-year-old man suffering from diffuse large B-cell lymphoma with diabetes presented intractable nausea and vomiting. Those symptoms were thought to be due to masses and nodules in the right frontal lobe and the cerebellum, and/or due to edema in the peripheral brain parenchyma. Because it was difficult to take medicines orally, we selected injections to control those symptoms. However, the combination of metoclopramide, haloperidol, and hydroxyzine injections failed to relieve nausea. Olanzapine is effective against nausea but is contraindicated for diabetic patients, so asenapine, one of the multi-acting receptor-targeted antipsychotics the same as olanzapine, was expected alternatively. The patient was administrated asenapine sublingually 5mg once a day before bedtime. This administration of asenapine remarkably improved his nausea. Discussion: Sublingual asenapine dose may be an effective therapeutic option for intractable nausea.
5.Evaluating the Effectiveness of Protocol-Based Pharmacotherapy Management in Streamlining Inquiries about In-Hospital Prescriptions and Reducing Unplanned Doctor Visits for Diabetic Patients
Misaki WAKAHARA ; Kazuyuki NAKAMURA ; Tadamasa MIURA ; Koichi MORI ; Tomokazu FUJII ; Kunikazu KONDO ; Naohiro MIZUTANI ; Yoji SUGIURA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2024;73(1):12-20
At Anjo Kosei Hospital, patients receive injectable medication for diabetes treatment and devices for self-monitoring of blood glucose as in-hospital prescriptions. Pharmacists manage prescriptions according to established protocols when there is over- or under-prescribing. In this study, we retrospectively examined outpatient prescriptions for patients attending endocrinology and diabetology from January 2014 to June 2015 (before protocol implementation) and from July 2015 to December 2020 (after protocol implementation) to evaluate the usefulness of protocol-based supporting prescription by pharmacists. Changing prescriptions based on the protocol simplified prescription queries in 661 of 721 cases (91.7%), and significantly decreased the rate of unplanned doctor visits after the introduction of the protocol (p<0.05). Optimization of prescriptions through protocol-based assistance in prescribing is expected to reduce the burden on physicians, patients, and pharmacists by reducing the number of formal inquiries for questionable prescriptions and the number of unplanned doctor visits.