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Dive into the research topics where Yasuyuki Kawanishi is active.

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Featured researches published by Yasuyuki Kawanishi.


British Journal of Psychiatry | 2014

Epidemic of charcoal burning suicide in Japan

Eiji Yoshioka; Sharon J.B. Hanley; Yasuyuki Kawanishi; Yasuaki Saijo

BACKGROUND The charcoal burning suicide epidemics in both Hong Kong and Taiwan have been well documented. However, little is known about the situation in Japan. AIMS To examine the impact of charcoal burning suicide on the overall and other method-specific suicide rates between 1998 and 2007 in Japan. METHOD Using data obtained from the Vital Statistics of Japan, negative binomial regression analyses were performed to investigate the impact of the charcoal burning method. RESULTS In males and females aged 15-24 and 25-44 years, the charcoal burning epidemic led to a substantial increase in overall suicides, without a decrease in other methods. In all other age groups, no such trend was observed. CONCLUSIONS In young Japanese, the charcoal burning method may have appealed to individuals who might not have chosen other highly or relatively lethal methods, and consequently led to an increase in overall suicides.


Australian Journal of Rural Health | 2013

Job stress and burnout among urban and rural hospital physicians in Japan

Yasuaki Saijo; Shigeru Chiba; Eiji Yoshioka; Yasuyuki Kawanishi; Yoshihiko Nakagi; Toshihiro Ito; Yoshihiko Sugioka; Kazuyo Kitaoka-Higashiguchi; Takahiko Yoshida

OBJECTIVE To elucidate the differences in job stress and burnout status of Japanese hospital physicians between large cities, small cities, and towns and villages. DESIGN Cross-sectional study. SETTING Postal self-administered questionnaires were distributed to 2937 alumni of Asahikawa Medical University. PARTICIPANTS Four hundred and twenty-two hospital physicians. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The Brief Job Stress Questionnaire was used to evaluate job demand, job control and social support. The Japanese version of the Maslach Burnout Inventory-General Survey (MBI-GS) was used to evaluate burnout. An analysis of covariance was conducted on the mean scores on the Brief Job Stress Questionnaire and the MBI-GS scales after adjusting for sex, age and specialties. RESULTS In adjusted analyses, the job demand score was significantly different among physicians in the three areas. In Bonferroni post-hoc tests, scores in large cities was significantly higher than those in small cities and towns and villages. The job control score showed a significant difference and a marginally significant trend, with large cities associated with lower job control. There were significant differences in support from supervisors and that from family/friends, and scores in large cities was significantly higher than those in small cities in the post-hoc test. There was a significant effect on the exhaustion scale of the MBI-GS, with large cities associated with higher exhaustion, and scores in large cities was significantly higher than those in small cities. CONCLUSIONS Urban hospital physicians had more job demand, less job control and exhaustion caused by burnout, and rural hospital physicians had less social support.


Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica | 2013

Clinicopathologic risk factors for recurrence of ovarian endometrioma following laparoscopic cystectomy

Kazuo Sengoku; Toshinobu Miyamoto; Michiharu Horikawa; Hideto Katayama; Kunihiko Nishiwaki; Yasuhito Kato; Yasuyuki Kawanishi; Yasuaki Saijo

To identify epidemiologic risk factors and investigate whether the characteristics of removed ovarian tissue during surgery influence the recurrence of endometriomas.


International Journal of Occupational Medicine and Environmental Health | 2014

Effects of work burden, job strain and support on depressive symptoms and burnout among Japanese physicians

Yasuaki Saijo; Shigeru Chiba; Eiji Yoshioka; Yasuyuki Kawanishi; Yoshihiko Nakagi; Toshihiro Itoh; Yoshihiko Sugioka; Kazuyo Kitaoka-Higashiguchi; Takahiko Yoshida

ObjectivesDays off, on call, night duty, working hours and job stress can affect physicians’ mental health, and support from supervisors and co-workers may have a buffering effect. This study elucidates whether job strain and job factors affect physicians’ mental health, and whether support from supervisors and co-workers has a protective effect on their mental health.Material and MethodsThe subjects included 494 physicians. The Brief Job Stress Questionnaire (BJSQ) was used to evaluate job demand, job control and support. High job strain was defined as a combination of high job demand and low job control. Depressive symptoms were assessed using the Patient Health Questionnaire-9. The Maslach Burnout Inventory-General Survey was used to evaluate burnout. Possible confounder adjusted logistic regression analyses were performed to obtain odds ratios for depressive symptoms and burnout.ResultsAs per the analysis, high job strain had significantly higher odds ratios, and support from co-workers had significant protective odds ratios for depressive symptoms. High job strain and having only 2–4 days off per month (compared to > 8 days off per month) had significantly higher odds ratios, and support from co-workers had significant protective odds ratios for burnout.ConclusionsHigh job strain was related to depressive symptoms and burnout, and support from co-workers had a buffering effect on depressive symptoms and burnout. An inadequate number of days off was related to burnout. Assessment of job strain may be a good tool to measure physicians’ mental health, and a sufficient number of days off may be needed to prevent burnout.


Industrial Health | 2016

Relationships of job demand, job control, and social support on intention to leave and depressive symptoms in Japanese nurses

Yasuaki Saijo; Eiji Yoshioka; Yasuyuki Kawanishi; Yoshihiko Nakagi; Toshihiro Itoh; Takahiko Yoshida

This study aims to elucidate the relationships among the factors of the demand-control-support model (DCS) on the intention to leave a hospital job and depressive symptoms. Participants included 1,063 nurses. Job demand, job control, and support from supervisors were found to be significantly related to both the intention to leave and depressive symptoms. Based on the odds ratios per 1 SD change in the DCS factors, low support from supervisors was found to be most related to the intention to leave, and low job control was found to be most related to depressive symptoms. In models that did not include “job demand” as an independent variable, 60-h working weeks were found to have a significantly higher odds ratio for depressive symptoms. Support from supervisors is more important in preventing intention to leave and depressive symptoms among nurses than is support from co-workers. Improving job control and avoiding long working hours may be important to prevent depressive symptoms.


Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences | 2016

Time trends in method-specific suicide rates in Japan, 1990–2011

Eiji Yoshioka; Sharon J.B. Hanley; Yasuyuki Kawanishi; Yasuaki Saijo

BACKGROUND Little is known about whether particular suicide methods have contributed differently to the recent unfavourable suicide mortality trends in Japan. Analysing such trends may shed light on the effect of potentially preventable factors, such as the impact of restricting access to certain popular suicide methods, on overall rates. Therefore, we assessed recent trends in method-specific suicide by gender and age in Japan. METHOD Suicide mortality and population data between 1990 and 2011 were obtained from the Vital Statistics of Japan and used to calculate method-specific mortality rates. Suicide methods were divided into seven groups: overdose, gases, hanging, drowning, cutting, jumping and other means. Age was divided into four groups: 15-24, 25-44, 45-64 and 65+ years. We applied joinpoint regression to the data and quantified the observed changes. RESULTS The results of the joinpoint regression analyses showed a sharp increase in overall suicide rates for males and females of all ages until the late 1990s. Suicide from hanging and jumping, in particular, contributed to this increase. After 2000, an increasing trend in overall suicide rates in both males and females aged 15-24 and 25-44 years was observed, with overdose, gases and hanging contributing to this increasing trend. CONCLUSIONS Our findings revealed that different suicide methods varied in their contribution to the recent overall suicide transition in Japan. Regarding factors associated with the recent increase in suicides by overdose, gases, hanging and jumping, further research is needed in order to promote and implement effective means restriction strategies.


International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health | 2017

Social support and its interrelationships with demand–control model factors on presenteeism and absenteeism in Japanese civil servants

Yasuaki Saijo; Eiji Yoshioka; Yoshihiko Nakagi; Yasuyuki Kawanishi; Sharon J.B. Hanley; Takahiko Yoshida

ObjectivesTo elucidate the impact of social support and its interrelations with other demand–control–support (DCS) model factors on presenteeism and absenteeism, and to determine which DCS factors were most influential.MethodsQuestionnaires from 2535 local government employees were analyzed. The Brief Job Stress Questionnaire (BJSQ) was used to assess DCS factors including job demand, job control, and social support from supervisors and coworkers. The Stanford Presenteeism Scale 13-item version (SPS-13) was used to evaluate both absenteeism (absent days) and presenteeism. For the latter, the Work Impairment Score (WIS) and the Work Output Score (WOS) were also used. Possible confounder-adjusted logistic and negative binomial regression analyses were performed to obtain odds ratios (ORs) for WIS and WOS and relative risks (RRs) for absenteeism according to DCS factors.ResultsHigher job control had a significantly protective effect on higher WIS in both males and females and a lower WOS in males. Based on a point estimate of an OR per 1 standard deviation change of each DCS factor, job control had the strongest effect on higher WIS in both males and females and a lower WOS in males. Higher job demand resulted in significantly higher ORs for both male and female WIS, and a lower WOS in females. Support from supervisors had a significantly protective effect on higher WIS in females and a lower WOS in males. Support from coworkers had a significantly protective effect on higher WIS in males. Higher support from coworkers had a significantly protective effect on absenteeism among both males and females, and higher job control had a significantly protective effect in females. The combination of high job strain and low support from supervisors had a significantly worsening effect, except for absenteeism in females. High job strain and low support from coworkers had a significantly worsening effect except for WOS in males.ConclusionsThe results suggest job control was the DCS factor most related to presenteeism. Higher support from supervisors and coworkers had a protective effect on presenteeism, and higher job demand had a worsening effect. Higher support from coworkers had a protective effect on absenteeism among both males and females. Interventions should focus on improving job control as a possible countermeasure to presenteeism, and encouraging support from coworkers as a possible countermeasure to absenteeism.


Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2017

Association of premorbid personality with behavioral and psychological symptoms in dementia with Lewy bodies: Comparison with Alzheimer's disease patients

Kazuki Tabata; Yasuaki Saijo; Fumiyoshi Morikawa; Juichiro Naoe; Eiji Yoshioka; Yasuyuki Kawanishi; Yoshihiko Nakagi; Takahiko Yoshida

The aim of this study was to elucidate the relation between premorbid personality traits and behavioral and psychological symptoms in dementia (BPSD) in dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) and Alzheimers disease (AD) patients.


Journal of General and Family Medicine | 2018

Relationships between road-distance to primary care facilities and ischemic heart disease and stroke mortality in Hokkaido, Japan: A Bayesian hierarchical approach to ecological count data

Yasuaki Saijo; Eiji Yoshioka; Yasuyuki Kawanishi; Yoshihiko Nakagi; Sharon J.B. Hanley; Takahiko Yoshida

Poor access to a primary care physician may lead to poor control of risk factors for disease. This study investigated whether geographic access to a primary care physician was related to ischemic heart disease and stroke mortality.


PLOS ONE | 2016

The Association between Prenatal Yoga and the Administration of Ritodrine Hydrochloride during Pregnancy: An Adjunct Study of the Japan Environment and Children’s Study

Yasuyuki Kawanishi; Yasuaki Saijo; Eiji Yoshioka; Yoshihiko Nakagi; Takahiko Yoshida; Toshinobu Miyamoto; Kazuo Sengoku; Yoshiya Ito; Chihiro Miyashita; Atsuko Araki; Reiko Kishi

Introduction While the beneficial effects of prenatal yoga have been reported in recent years, little is known about its effectiveness in pregnant Japanese women. Despite several adverse effects, ritodrine hydrochloride is frequently prescribed to suppress preterm labor in Japan, and its usage may therefore indicate cases of preterm labor. This study aimed to clarify the association between prenatal yoga and ritodrine hydrochloride use during pregnancy. Methods An observational study was conducted as an adjunct study by the Hokkaido unit of the Japan Environment and Children’s Study. Information on prenatal yoga practice was collected using a self-questionnaire between March 21, 2012, and July 7, 2015, targeting women who had recently delivered. Ritodrine hydrochloride use was identified from medical records. A total of 2,692 women were analyzed using logistic regression models that adjusted for possible confounders. Results There were 567 (21.1%) women who practiced prenatal yoga, which was associated with a lower risk of ritodrine hydrochloride use (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 0.77; 95% CI 0.61–0.98). This was especially evident in women with a total practice duration that exceeded 900 minutes throughout their pregnancy (adjusted OR 0.54; 95% CI 0.38–0.76). A sensitivity analysis that excluded patients with threatened abortion during the study period produced similar results. Conclusions Prenatal yoga was associated with a lower risk of ritodrine hydrochloride use, particularly in women with more than 900 minutes of practice time over the course of their pregnancy. Prenatal yoga may be a beneficial option for pregnant women in the selection of alternative therapies.

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Yasuaki Saijo

Asahikawa Medical University

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Eiji Yoshioka

Asahikawa Medical University

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Takahiko Yoshida

Asahikawa Medical University

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Yoshihiko Nakagi

Asahikawa Medical University

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Kazuo Sengoku

Asahikawa Medical University

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Shigeru Chiba

Asahikawa Medical College

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Toshihiro Ito

Asahikawa Medical College

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Toshihiro Itoh

Asahikawa Medical University

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