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1.
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine ; : 582-601, 2013.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-373899

ABSTRACT

  We examined how difficult it would be for the elderly living in mountainous areas to go to the nearest hospital using a Voronoi tessellation representing the mathematical concept of neighborhood. We defined the index of the nursing-care capacity for the elderly as the ratio of the number of caregivers to the number of the elderly receiving nursing-care.<br>  The mean age of those who drive to the hospital by themselves worked out at 70±9.8 years. Meanwhile, that of those who go to the hospital by bus or taken to hospital in a car driven by a family member came to 80±7.0years. The latter was significantly older than the former.<br>  The areas of the Voronoi tessellation generated by patients' places of residence were divided into three groups according to the size. The plots of these three groups of the the places of residence on the map had a three-layer and doughnut-like structure, i. e., inner-, middle-, and outer-layer.<br>  The index of the nursing-care capacity in 2008 was less than 1.0 for the patients under 80 years of age. This means that when those who were at the age of 50 in 2008 become old and need nursing-care, access to the hospital will become harder to them than at present. For those who are over 80 years of age and live in the outer layer that is far away from arterial road, it will be almost impossible.<br>  These findings suggest that outpatient care with transportation assistance by a family member at present should be reconsidered because of the future lack of care personnel. It would also be necessary to consider the welfare of older people from the geographical point of view in order to manage the problems concerning the various physical and sociological difficulties of the elderly.

2.
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine ; : 1-16, 2010.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-361689

ABSTRACT

  After 1985, the decrease in domestic nursing power progressed gradually. The care for the elderly shifted from domestic private nursing to public nursing-care services when the long-term nursing-care insurance law was enacted in 2000. Because many of the elderly receiving nursing care suffer from chronic ailments of hypertension or the consequences of cerebrovascular disease, etc., cooperation between hospitals and nursing homes is necessary and indispensable. We began exchanging information by E-mail on a trial basis with a special elderly nursing home in April 2009. We aimed to integrate medical care and nursing by sharing medical and nursing information. We concluded that the use of E-mail could serve our purpose. The reason why we reached this conclusion is as follows:The mechanism of the information transmission by E-mail, that also relates to semiotics and narratology, is related to the essence of the description. This mechanism functions as a tool for mutual understanding among hospitals, nursing homes, and families. This also functions as a device to make the medical and nursing experience join. As a result, this mechanism enables the elderly to escape death as dying of sickness in the hospital and to die a natural death in the course of nursing. It is an easy method that can be introduced at a low cost for the purpose of establishing cooperation in medical and nursing care among hospitals, clinics, nursing homes, and nursing support centers, etc. especially in medically underserved remote areas.

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