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Acta Neurologica Scandinavica | 1992

Effect of physical exercise on mortality in patients with Parkinson's disease

Kenji Kuroda; Kozo Tatara; Toshio Takatorige; Fumiaki Shinsho

Public health nurses visited and followed up for more than one year 438 patients with Parkinsons disease living in Osaka. The follow‐up period averaged 4.1 years, during which 71 deaths were observed. The patients were classified according to the degree of physical exercise they performed, and the ratios of observed to expected deaths were calculated. The exercising group showed the lowest ratio of 1.68 (1.45 for patients able to walk independently, and 1.89 for those could not) while all patients exhibited a ratio of 2.47. Multivariate analysis using Coxs proportional hazard model, adjusted for age, sex, walking ability and duration of disease at study entry, showed that, compared with the exercising group, the non‐exercising patients had a hazard ratio of 1.83.


BMJ | 1991

Relation between use of health check ups starting in middle age and demand for inpatient care by elderly people in Japan.

Kozo Tatara; Fumiaki Shinsho; Masatake Suzuki; Toshio Takatorige; Noriyuki Nakanishi; Kenji Kuroda

OBJECTIVE--To find out whether there is any correlation between the use of general health check ups (provided for by the Health Services for the Elderly Act 1982) by insured Japanese residents aged 40 or older and demand by the elderly for inpatient care. DESIGN--A questionnaire was posted in 1988 to municipal offices of Japanese cities. All questionnaires were returned with data for 1983 and 1986. SETTING--All 509 Japanese cities with a population of 30,000-199,999. SUBJECTS--All people aged 40 or older who hold a resident card and are not offered health examinations at work are eligible for general health check ups. The questionnaire also inquired about use of inpatient care by elderly residents (aged 70 or older) who were covered by national health insurance. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES--Correlation coefficients between the rates of use of general health check ups and mean annual bed days for the elderly. Comparison of relative changes by analysis of correlation between improvement indices in mean bed days and mean inpatient fee. RESULTS--In cities with relatively high rates of use of health check ups both the mean annual bed days and the mean inpatient fee for the elderly tended to be low. Correlation coefficients between the logarithmic rates of use of check ups and mean bed days by sizes of cities and number of beds were all negative values. There tended to be more correlation between improvement indices for rate of use of check ups and both mean bed days and mean inpatient fee with higher rates of use in 1983, and the correlation was significant for rates of 60% or more. CONCLUSIONS--Strong health service programmes that start in middle age decrease the demand for inpatient care of the elderly. It was estimated that in a single year from 1985 to 1986, when there was an increase in the rate of use of check ups from 25.5% to 27.6%, the reduction in the number of bed days for the total of 8.5 million elderly insured people was 2.21 million bed days.


Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health | 1997

Effects of preventive health services on survival of the elderly living in a community in Osaka, Japan.

Noriyuki Nakanishi; Kozo Tatara; Toshio Tatatorige; Shigeki Murakami; Fumiaki Shinsho

STUDY OBJECTIVE: To examine the relationships between the use of preventive health services--such as health checks, basic health examination/cancer screening, and daily preventive health practices--and survival of elderly people living in the community. DESIGN AND SETTING: A cohort of elderly people aged 65 years and over living in Settsu City, Osaka was followed for 38 months. Data on the history of health management, disability scores, and psychosocial conditions were collected in October 1992 by interview during home visits. SUBJECTS: Of the 1491 people randomly selected from the computerised sex-age register at enrollment, 1473 were contacted and responses were obtained from 1405 (95.4%). They constituted the study cohort. Follow up was completed for 1325 (94.3%) (154 decreased and 1171 alive). MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: From the analysis using the Kaplan-Meier method and the log-rank test, female sex, younger age group (65-74 years), use of health checks, use of basic health examination and/or cancer screening, use of daily preventive health practices, less disability, taking part in social activity, and finding life worth living were univariately statistically significantly related to survival. The estimated survival rates were highest in those with regular health checks or daily preventive health practices before 59 years of age or both basic health examination and cancer screening. From the Cox proportional hazards model, use of health checks and use of daily preventive health practices remained as statistically significant factors associated with survival, controlling for other factors such as sex, age group, medical treatment, disability scores, and psycho-social conditions, and these hazard ratios (not used v starting at 59 years) were 0.41 (95% CI, 0.25, 0.66) and 0.52 (95% CI, 0.30, 0.88), respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Health management efforts such as health checks and daily preventive health practices may increase survival in the elderly.


Medical Care | 1993

MAIN TRENDS IN HOSPITAL USE IN DIFFERENT CITIES IN JAPAN

Kozo Tatara; Fumiaki Shinsho; Chiharu Nishigaki; Toshio Takatorige; Etsuji Okamoto; Kenji Kuroda

In this study, trends in hospital use were identified in Japanese cities. Data for all inpatient care in May 1985 (9,555 patients) and in May 1988 (11,205 patients) paid for by National Health Insurance in 12 cities in Osaka Prefecture were analyzed. The main factor affecting differences in inpatient days per insured person of all ages (hospital use) among the cities were differences in hospital use by long-stay patients aged 70 years or older, which depended not on inpatient days per patient but on the rate of hospital admission. The main factor affecting change in mean hospital use from May 1985 to May 1988 seemed to be an increase in hospital use by long-stay patients 70 years or age or older, which did not depend on increases in the rate of hospital admission, but did depend on the number of insured persons 70 years of age or older. Calculation showed that an increase of 13 long-stay patients 70 years of age or older for 10,000 insured persons 70 years of age or older per year was to have accounted for about 40% of the increase in hospital use by all patients. If the trend for increasing hospital use in Japan is to be altered, the first step might be the careful planning for this comparatively small increase in long-stay elderly patients by promotion of a non-hospital-based care system.


Scandinavian journal of social medicine | 1998

Prevalence of intellectual dysfunctioning and its correlates in a community-residing elderly population

Noriyuki Nakanishi; Kozo Tatara; Fumiaki Shinsho; Toshio Takatorige; Shigeki Murakami; Hideki Fukuda

To examine the prevalence of intellectual dysfunctioning and its correlates in community-residing elderly people, a randomly selected sample of 1,405 people aged 65 and over living in Settsu, Osaka, were investigated in October 1992. Data for assessing intellectual dysfunctioning were obtained from 1,364 people (97.1%), excluding 21 clinically demented people (1.5%); 17.6/100, 5.6/100, and 3.3/100 of the population showed minor, moderate, and appreciable intellectual dysfunctioning, respectively, and the prevalence of intellectual dysfunctioning increased with age. By multivariate analyses using logistic regression, age over 75, poor general health, including current medical treatment, and psychosocial conditions such as no participation in social activities, no life worth living (no Ikigai), and anxiety about the future were independent risk factors for intellectual dysfunctioning. We conclude that intellectual dysfunctioning is closely associated with health and psychosocial conditions.


Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine | 1998

Does Prompt Treatment of Hypertension after Blood Pressure Check-ups Reduce Morbidity of Cerebrovascular Diseases?

Fumiaki Shinsho; Kozo Tatara; Kazue Nakajima; Hideki Fukuda; Nobuo Nishi; Toshio Takatorige

In Japan, more than 20 million people utilize blood pressure check-up services in their work places or communities every year. To examine the relationship between prompt treatment of hypertension after these blood pressure check-ups and the severity, age at onset, and type of cerebrovascular diseases in these patients, a study was performed with the cooperation of all 174 independent physicians, 17 hospitals, and 4 welfare homes in the city of N.. All patients aged 50 years or more who visited a physician during the study period in this city were included in the study (n=978). Information on hypertensive control before the onset of cerebrovascular diseases was obtained from 668 patients. The results suggests that for those who had received prompt treatment after early detection of hypertension, the disease was less severe and the onset of the disease was delayed. Among our subjects, 47% of the patients claimed to have received prompt treatment after detection of hypertension. As N. is an ordinary Japanese city in terms of the promotion of health check-up programs, this percentage suggests that blood pressure check-up programs for the early detection of hypertension throughout Japan may have contributed to an overall reduction in severity for almost half of the patients with cerebrovascular diseases.


Age and Ageing | 1999

Mortality in relation to urinary and faecal incontinence in elderly people living at home.

Noriyuki Nakanishi; Kozo Tatara; Fumiaki Shinsho; Shigeki Murakami; Toshio Takatorige; Hideki Fukuda; Kazue Nakajima; Hiromi Naramura


Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology | 1998

Associations between self-assessed masticatory disability and health of community-residing elderly people.

Noriyuki Nakanishi; Youichi Hino; Osamu Ida; Hideki Fukuda; Fumiaki Shinsho; Kozo Tatara


International Dental Journal | 2001

New strategy for better geriatric oral health in Japan: 80/20 movement and Healthy Japan 21.

Fumiaki Shinsho


Age and Ageing | 1992

Factors Related to Long-term Stay in Hospital by Elderly People in a Japanese City

Kenji Kuroda; Kozo Tatara; Toshio Takatorige; Lin Zhao; Fumiaki Shinsho

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