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Dive into the research topics where Masayo Kashiwagi is active.

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Featured researches published by Masayo Kashiwagi.


BMC Geriatrics | 2013

Factors associated with the use of home-visit nursing services covered by the long-term care insurance in rural Japan: a cross-sectional study

Masayo Kashiwagi; Nanako Tamiya; Mikiya Sato; Eiji Yano

BackgroundIn Japan, there is a large increase in the number of elderly persons who potentially need home-visit nursing services (VNS). However, the number of persons using the VNS has increased only little in comparison to the number of individuals who use home social services, which are also covered by the Long-Term Care Insurance (LTCI) system. This cross-sectional study investigated the predictors of the VNS used under the LTCI system in Japan.MethodsWe used 1,580 claim data from all the users of community-based services and 1,574 interview survey data collected in 2001 from the six municipal bodies in Japan. After we merged the two datasets, 1,276 users of community-based services under the LTCI were analyzed. Multiple logistic regression models stratified by care needs levels were used for analysis.ResultsOnly 8.3% of the study subjects were VNS users. Even among study participants within the higher care-needs level, only 22.0% were VNS users. In the lower care level group, people with a higher care level (OR: 3.50, 95% CI: 1.50–8.93), those whose condition needed long term care due to respiratory or heart disease (OR: 4.31, 95% CI: 1.88–89.20), those whose period of needing care was two years or more (OR: 2.01, 95% CI: 1.14–3.48), those whose service plan was created by a medical care management agency (OR: 2.39, 95% CI: 1.31–4.33), those living with family (OR: 1.86, 95% CI: 1.00–3.42), and those who use home-help services (OR: 2.12, 95% CI: 1.17–3.83) were more likely to use the VNS. In the higher care level group, individuals with higher care level (OR: 3.63, 95% CI: 1.56–8.66), those with higher income (OR: 3.79, 95% CI: 1.01–14.25), and those who had regular hospital visits before entering the LTCI (OR: 2.36, 95% CI: 1.11–5.38) were more likely to use the VNS.ConclusionsOur results suggested that VNS use is limited due to management by non-medical care management agencies, due to no caregivers being around or a low income household. The findings of this study provide valuable insight for LTCI policy makers: the present provision of VNS should be reconsidered.


BMC Health Services Research | 2011

Predictors of the highest long-term care expenditures in Japan

Pedro Olivares-Tirado; Nanako Tamiya; Masayo Kashiwagi; Kimikazu Kashiwagi

BackgroundIn Japan, as the number of elderly covered by the Long-term Care Insurance (LTCI) system has increased, demand for long-term care services has increased substantially and consequently growing expenditures are threatening the sustainability of the system. Understanding the predictive factors associated with long-term care expenditures among the elderly would be useful in developing future strategies to ensure the sustainability of the system. We report a set of predictors of the highest long-term care expenditures in a cohort of elderly persons who received consecutive long-term care services during a year in a Japanese city.MethodsData were obtained from databases of the LTC insurer of City A in Japan. Binary logistic regression was used to examine the predictors of the highest long-term care expenditures. We used a simplified model that focused on the effects of disability status and type of services used, while controlling for several relevant factors. Goodness of fit, a multicollinearity test, and logistic regression diagnostics were carried out for the final model.ResultsThe study cohort consisted of 862 current users of LTCI system in city A. After controlling for gender and income, age, increased utilization rate of benefits, decline in functional status, higher care needs level and institutional care were found to be associated with the highest LTCI expenditures. An increased utilization rate of benefits (OR = 24.2) was a strong main effect predictors of the high LTC expenditures. However, a significant interaction between institutional care and high care need level was found, providing evidence of the combined effect of the two covariates.ConclusionsBeyond to confirm that disability status of elderly persons is the main factor driving the demand of LTC services and consequently the expenditures, we showed that changes in utilization rate of benefits -a specific insurance factor- and the use of institutional care conditional on the high care level, were strongest predictors of the highest LTC expenditures. These findings could become crucial for tracking policies aimed at ensuring financial sustainability of LTCI from a public insurer perspective in Japan.


Qualitative Health Research | 2011

Home Care Nurses’ Provision of Support to Families of the Elderly at the End of Life:

Yuko Hirano; Noriko Yamamoto-Mitani; Mari Ueno; Shiho Takemori; Masayo Kashiwagi; Izumi Sato; Noa Miyata; Mari Kimata; Hiroki Fukahori; Masako Yamada

In this article we describe our study of assistance for family decisions and caregiving by Japanese home care nurses to families of elderly relatives at the end of life. The participants were 31 nurses who had been evaluated as providing good end-of-life care. We carried out semistructured interviews concerning the practice of family support in two cases (cancer and noncancer). We conducted a qualitative analysis using the constant comparative approach and derived several categories inductively. Home care nurses are responsible for (a) estimating the possibility of dying at home, (b) visualizing what is coming and what can be done, (c) proposing where and how the family can say goodbye, (d) building family consensus, (e) coordinating resources, and (f) offering psychological support for end-of-life care. End-of-life family care by home care nurses is a process in which multiple components of care are provided with changing content as death approaches.


BMC Health Services Research | 2012

Effect of in-home and community-based services on the functional status of elderly in the long-term care insurance system in Japan

Pedro Olivares-Tirado; Nanako Tamiya; Masayo Kashiwagi

BackgroundJapan is setting the pace among aging societies of the world. In 2005, Japan became the country with the highest proportion of elderly persons in the world. To deal with the accelerated ageing population and with an increased demand for long-term care services, in April 2000 the Japanese government introduced a mandatory social Long-Term Care Insurance System (LTCI), making long-term care services a universal entitlement for elderly. Overseas literature suggests that the effectiveness of a home visiting program is uncertain in terms of preventing a decline in the functional status of elderly individuals. In Japan, many studies regarding factors associated with LTC service utilization have been conducted, however, limited evidence about the effect of LTC services on the progression of recipient disability is available.MethodsData were obtained from databases of the LTC insurer of City A. To examine the effect of in-home and community-based services on disability status of recipients, a survival analysis in a cohort of moderately disabled elderly people, was conducted.ResultsThe mean age of participants was 81 years old, and females represented 69% of the participants. A decline or an improvement in functional status, was observed in 43% and 27% of the sample, respectively. After controlling for other variables, women had a significantly greater probability of improving their functional status during all phases of the observation period. The use of “one service” and the amount of services utilized (days/month), were marginally (p = < 0.10) associated with a greater probability of improving their functional status at 12 months into the observation period.ConclusionsThe observed effects of in-home and community-based services on disability transition status were considered fairly modest and weak, in terms of their ability to improve or to prevent a decline in functional status. We suggest two mechanisms to explain these findings. First, disability transition as a measure of disability progression may not be specific enough to assess changes in functional status of LTCI recipients. Secondly, in-home and community-based services provided in City A, may be inappropriate in terms of intensity, duration or quality of care.


Geriatrics & Gerontology International | 2013

Factors that allow elderly individuals to stay at home with their families using the Japanese long‐term care insurance system

Yumiko Oyama; Nanako Tamiya; Masayo Kashiwagi; Mikiya Sato; Kazuhiro Ohwaki; Eiji Yano

This study examined the factors that allow elderly individuals to stay at home continuously by considering the roles of the family caregiver, the use of services and characteristics of the elderly individual.


Geriatrics & Gerontology International | 2010

Comparison of public and private care management agencies under public long-term care insurance in Japan: A cross-sectional study

Yoji Yoshioka; Nanako Tamiya; Masayo Kashiwagi; Mikiya Sato; Ichiro Okubo

Aim:  Long‐Term Care Insurance (LTCI), which started in April 2000, allowed private business corporations to provide long‐term care services which had been provided by social welfare corporations or public agencies in the previous long‐term care scheme. This study compared differences in care management plans for community‐dwelling frail elderly people between public care management agencies and private care management agencies.


Death Studies | 2005

Alexithymia and grief reactions in bereaved japanese women

Mutsuhiro Nakao; Masayo Kashiwagi; Eiji Yano

ABSTRACT To examine the relationship between grief reactions and alexithymia, 54 Japanese women (33 outpatients attending a psychosomatic clinic and 21 normal healthy participants) completed the Texas Inventory of Grief (TIG), the 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20), and the Profile of Mood States (POMS). Each woman had experienced the death of a spouse or a first-degree relative. The TIG scores were positively correlated to the scores on the first TAS-20 factor of Difficulty Identifying Feelings and on the POMS tension–anxiety and depression scales. The scores on the first TAS-20 factor were higher in the psychosomatic group than in the normal group. Complicated grief reactions may be closely associated with both alexithymic character and mood states in bereaved Japanese women.


Geriatrics & Gerontology International | 2014

Relationship between structural characteristics and outcome quality indicators at health care facilities for the elderly requiring long‐term care in Japan from a nationwide survey

Felipe Alfonso Sandoval Garrido; Nanako Tamiya; Masayo Kashiwagi; Sumiko Miyata; Jiro Okochi; Yoko Moriyama; Yui Yamaoka; Kiyoshi Takamuku

To clarify the performance situation of selected quality indicators: falls, pressure ulcers and dehydration, at health care facilities for the elderly in Japan, and what structural characteristics are related to them.


Geriatrics & Gerontology International | 2015

Characteristics of visiting nurse agencies with high home death rates: A prefecture-wide study in Japan

Masayo Kashiwagi; Nanako Tamiya; Masako Murata

The purpose of the present study was to identify characteristics of visiting nurse agencies (VNA) in Japan with high home death rates by a prefecture‐wide survey.


BMJ Open | 2012

Factors that prolong the ‘postmortem interval until finding’ (PMI-f) among community-dwelling elderly individuals in Japan: analysis of registration data

Tomoko Ito; Nanako Tamiya; Hideto Takahashi; Kentaro Yamazaki; Hideki Yamamoto; Shoji Sakano; Masayo Kashiwagi; Satoru Miyaishi

Objectives To clarify the factors affecting ‘postmortem interval until finding’ (PMI-f) among elderly unexpected death cases. Design Cross-sectional study. Setting All area of Yamagata prefecture in Japan. Participants Entering subjects were 5675 elderly cases with age of ≥65 years selected from all 9002 cases of unexpected death from 2002 to 2007 in Yamagata prefecture between 2002 and 2007. Our final study subjects consisted of 3387 cases sampled with several criteria to assess the factors to prolong PMI-f. Primary outcome measures The outcome was the postmortem interval until finding (PMI-f) as the time from death until finding the body which we defined in this study. Results ‘Living alone’ showed the highest adjusted HR (3.73, 95% CI 3.37 to 4.13), also ‘unnatural death’ (1.50, 1.28 to 1.75), ‘found at own home’ (1.37, 1.22 to 1.55) and ‘younger subjects’ (0.99, 0.98 to 0.99). In the model including interactions with the household situation, we found ‘male subjects living alone’ and ‘female subjects living with family’ tended to be found later. Conclusions PMI-f is an effective outcome for quantitative analyses of risk of bodies left. To prevent the elderly dead bodies left for long time, it is necessary to keep regular home-based contact with elderly individuals living alone.

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Hideto Takahashi

Fukushima Medical University

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Yumiko Oyama

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Hiroki Fukahori

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Yasuko Ogata

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Akemi Matsuzawa

Ibaraki Christian University

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