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  • fuckedgaijin ‹ General ‹ F*cked News

Baby-Free Japan Also Obstetrician-Free

Odd news from Japan and all things Japanese around the world.
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Baby-Free Japan Also Obstetrician-Free

Postby Mulboyne » Fri Feb 18, 2005 11:29 am

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Dying breeds
UPI: Japan facing shortage of obstetricians
Japan is facing a shortage of obstetricians, a national medical group reported Thursday. The Japan Society of Obstetrics and Gynecology said that at least 117 hospitals across the country are short of obstetricians. Fewer young doctors are choosing the field, either because they want to avoid irregular hours or because they perceive the field as having less prestige than other specializations, the society said. As a result, some hospitals, especially in smaller towns, will be unable to admit expectant mothers for childbirth, the group said.
This guy certainly saw a fall in prestige:
Japan Times: Royal doctor suspended by university (2003)
The obstetrician who delivered Crown Princess Masako's first baby, Princess Aiko, in 2001 has been suspended by his university for misusing public subsidies, officials said June 3. The University of Tokyo suspended professor Osamu Tsutsumi, 53, for one month for improperly handling 22.5 million yen in research subsidies since 1998.
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Postby Mulboyne » Thu May 25, 2006 7:36 am

Irish Medical Times: Obstetrician crisis in Japan
A shortage of obstetricians in Japan is resulting in some pregnant women being asked to give birth at distant regional hospitals or face a helicopter flight to the nearest maternity ward in the event of premature labour. Some births are being induced to coincide with the presence of an obstetrician, it has been claimed. The Washington Post reported that, in a nation where a chronically low fertility rate is causing the bottom to fall out of the baby-birthing business, some communities are forced to make do with temporary obstetricians, who spend the day working from 10 a.m. to 5.30 p.m. before departing for home...more...
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Postby Mulboyne » Sun Apr 08, 2007 7:17 pm

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Postby Greji » Sun Apr 08, 2007 10:01 pm

"There are those that learn by reading. Then a few who learn by observation. The rest have to piss on an electric fence and find out for themselves!"- Will Rogers
:kanpai:
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Postby kamome » Mon Apr 09, 2007 4:59 am

Greji wrote:This sounds like a very serious problem for J-women. As a result I think it is my civic duty to volunteer to help. Where can I post a message to notify any J-woman who might need OB/Gyn assistance and can't find it, to tell them that they can bring that beaver over me and I'll be happy to look it over for them!
:cool:


I presume you'll be limiting your services to underserved women in the 18-30 age bracket and that they'll have to send a full-body photo first?
YBF is as ageless as time itself.--Cranky Bastard, 7/23/08

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There is no such category as "low" when classifying your basic Asian Beaver. There is only excellent and magnifico!--Greji, 1/7/06
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Postby Greji » Mon Apr 09, 2007 5:08 am

kamome wrote:I presume you'll be limiting your services to underserved women in the 18-30 age bracket and that they'll have to send a full-body photo first?


Eight to Eighty, blind, crippled, or crazy. A public service.
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"There are those that learn by reading. Then a few who learn by observation. The rest have to piss on an electric fence and find out for themselves!"- Will Rogers
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Postby Mulboyne » Fri Oct 24, 2008 4:07 pm

Yomiuri: Last defense for moms, newborns on brink
The "last line of defense" for women and their newborns who need emergency care is teetering on the edge of collapse. "We have an extreme shortage of doctors in our obstetrics and gynecology departments," was the frank acknowledgement of a senior official of the Tokyo metropolitan government Wednesday. "We have to do something." Many perinatal care centers that are supposed to safeguard the lives of these women and their children have been turning them away due to a lack of doctors, a development that had tragic consequences earlier this month when a 36-year-old heavily pregnant woman died after being denied admission to seven Tokyo hospitals. Metropolitan Bokuto Hospital, which is designated as a comprehensive perinatal care center for mothers and infants, accepted the woman 45 minutes after refusing the first request for admission.

The Tokyo metropolitan area is home to nine comprehensive perinatal care centers. Metropolitan Bokuto Hospital received this designation in 1999. However, its obstetrics and gynecology department has been plagued by a chronic staff shortage since 2004, when the number of full-time obstetricians there fell below nine--the recommended staffing level. In November 2006, the lack of doctors there forced the hospital to stop accepting new reservations for prenatal checks. The situation went from bad to worse in June this year when a part-time obstetrician who had worked at nights quit. Since July, the hospital has had only one doctor working nights on weekends and public holidays, and generally refuses to accept pregnant women requiring emergency care at these times.

The latest case occurred on Oct. 4--a Saturday. A junior doctor with five years of experience, who was working the night shift alone, initially refused to treat the woman. She died from a brain hemorrhage three days after giving birth. However, the director of the hospital's obstetrics and gynecology department has leaped to the defense of the junior doctor. "The stark reality is that we had to make this young doctor, who we had been grateful to get, work the night shift," Zuisei Hayashi said at a press conference. "You shouldn't pin the blame on him."

Strenuous working conditions and the increasing risk of becoming the target of legal action have led to the national scarcity in obstetricians, which is noticeable even in Tokyo. "We've improved doctors' working conditions and increased their allowances, and we've asked university hospitals to help provide us with staff," an official of the metropolitan government said. "But it's still a real struggle to secure enough obstetricians." The central government institutionalized emergency care hospitals for pregnant women in 1996. These hospitals were required to have a supervising obstetrician on duty around the clock to handle critically ill pregnant women and provide emergency treatment to newborns. The hospitals are basically required to have several doctors on duty. As of May, 74 such facilities were operating across the country. Only Yamagata and Saga prefectures lacked such hospitals.

The government also has been moving ahead with the provision of regional hospitals than can offer relatively advanced treatment to pregnant women. As of April, 237 such facilities had been designated by the government. But the doctor shortage has meant that incidences of comprehensive perinatal care centers having to turn down pregnant women has become more common than not. A survey conducted by a national association of maternal and fetal intensive care unit representatives on 60 comprehensive perinatal care centers revealed that these hospitals only accepted 67 percent of requests to treat pregnant woman in 2005. The figure averaged just 44 percent in Tokyo and Osaka.

The results of a survey conducted by the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry also set alarm bells ringing. The survey found that 74 percent of hospitals turned away pregnant women seeking treatment in fiscal 2005. Eighty-eight percent of these hospitals said they had been unable to accept women because their neonatal intensive care unit was full, 48 percent said their prenatal intensive care units had no beds available, while 16 percent said they had no doctors on hand to give medical examinations.

However, some hospitals have been resourceful enough to get around their staffing problems. Aomori Prefectural Chuo Hospital has decided it will generally accept all requests for treatment from expectant and nursing mothers. If the hospital cannot for some reason take in such women, it will track down a hospital that is able to accept them. The hospital often has no spare beds available, so in some instances, beds have been wheeled to trainee doctors' rooms and women who have just given birth have recuperated there. One or two of the hospital's six obstetricians work nights, and a doctor on standby at home can be called in should an emergency arise.

The Japanese Red Cross Nagoya Daiichi Hospital accepts all of the almost 400 requests for treatment it receives each year. Even when the intensive care unit is full, the hospital will accept patients, stabilize their condition and them transport them to medical institutions that can provide further care. About 30 such cases occur each year. "Ideally, we would be able to treat all our patients right through," said Kaoru Ishikawa, head of the hospital's comprehensive perinatal care center for mothers and infants. "But it would be impossible to accept everyone if we didn't treat some of them while moving some of them on." With 13 doctors on its books, the hospital always has two doctors working night shifts. Ishikawa suggested this should have been the minimum acceptable at Metropolitan Bokuto Hospital. "If they couldn't ensure they had two doctors available, perhaps they should have given up their role as an emergency center," he said.
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Postby canman » Fri Oct 24, 2008 5:11 pm

For the life of me I really can't understand why Japan cannot solve this crisis. I know that their outdated medical system is to blame, but can't they look at how other countries are dealing with these issues and try and implement a better system. All I ever hear is that there is a crisis, but no plan on what to do. IT seems simple to me, get more doctors, give them more money and allow them to have more time off. Have some kind of rotation system so that doctors aren't on call for 36 to 48 hours straight and help out with malpractice insurance. It is the only way to solve this problem.
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