1.Disaster Relief Activities of a Pharmacist Team That Accompanied the Kansai Intensive Area Care Unit for SARS-CoV-2 at an Intensive Care Home for the Elderly Affected by the 2024 Noto Peninsula Earthquake
Takashi IMANISHI ; Shota IMAHORI ; Masanori KOBAYASHI ; Shigemi MURAKAMI ; Tomomi YOSHIMURA ; Takeyuki KOHNO ; Eiji KAWAKAMI
An Official Journal of the Japan Primary Care Association 2025;48(4):118-122
Following the Great East Japan Earthquake, the role of pharmacists in disaster areas has grown in importance and responsibilities have become increasingly diverse. During the 2024 Noto Peninsula Earthquake, we participated in disaster relief activities as a pharmacist team. In these efforts, we worked alongside the Kansai Intensive Area Care Unit for SARS-CoV-2 "KISA2-tai". We encountered a situation that highlights the critical role of pharmacist teams in disaster relief efforts at an intensive care home for the elderly. Herein, we report the results and problems encountered during these activities.
3.A theory–based trial for improving both economic growth and medical education in a university hospital
Yoko Obata ; Hisayuki Hamada ; Takashi Miyamoto ; Kayoko Matsushima ; Shigeru Kohno
Medical Education 2013;44(1):29-32
1)We instituted the “CHANGE Nagasaki University Hospital” project to improve both management and medical education and to boost the number of physicians recruited to this hospital.
2)We first identified the physicians’ problems and complaints via a questionnaire. Next, focusing on the most common complaints, we reduced secondary duties and methodically improved the educational environment by employing the a– b–c–d–strategy, which is based on the principles of medical education.
3)As a result, both, the hospital’s economic growth and the recruitment figures for resident physicians have increased continuously over the past 4 years.
4.A Case of Multiple Right Subclavian Arterial Aneurysms with Dysphagia.
Yuji Suda ; Yasuo Takeuchi ; Akihiko Gomi ; Hayao Nakatani ; Koji Kohno ; Takashi Shimabukuro ; Naoko Nagano
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1997;26(4):262-264
A 61-year-old woman who presented with symptoms of dysphagia was hospitalized after right subclavian artery aneurysm was diagnosed. A selective right subclavian arteriogram revealed the presence of two large subclavian arterial aneurysms. The operative procedure consisted of aneurysmectomy through a right supuraclavian incision followed by the reconstruction of the blood vessel by end-to-end anastomosis of the right subclavian artery. The postoperative course was uneventful. Multiple subclavian artery aneurysms are rare among peripheral aneurysms. This case was found by the symptoms of dysphagia caused by compression of the esophagus. The etiology of this case is unclear, but most likely was due to trauma.


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