Title: Hserv 534 Session 10
1Hserv 534 Session 10
- Japan
- Dr. Tsukasa Namekata
2Email responses from Session 9
- April 25 Vancouver Sun front page report on study
of 52 communities in Saskatchewan where small
hospitals either closed or converted to clinics
in 1993-4, - found death rates dropped fasted in communities
where hospitals were closed! - Similar study for Manitoba
- why did Canada go down in the health Olympics,did
the inequalities increase ?
3 Assessing the Impact of the 1993 Acute Care
Funding Cuts to Rural Saskatchewan
Hospitals.(1999) Saskatoon, Health Services
Utilization and Research Commission.
4Age, sex standardized death rates per 100,000
population by community group, before and after
the 1993 acute care funding cuts
5Email responses from Session 9
- One of the maps shown in the class indicated
Canadians who live in areas closer to the borders
with the U.S. are healthier. - What is their perception of the gap between the
rich and the poor, do they naturally look at the
U.S. and feel that they are less wealthy?
6Email responses from Session 9
- Big difference in population density between
Canada and the U.S. - How does it affects the social cohesion
- Rural areas tend to be agricultural or
subsistence society, thus more social cohesive,
despite being economically poorer than urban
areas. - But rural areas in Canada are less healthy than
urban areas. Doesn't this indicate that public
health system is more relevant factor for health
than socio-economic structure such as social
cohesion?
7Email responses from Session 9
- Both Norway and Canada have a history of a social
contract lacking in the US, wonder what the
"resistance factor" might be here - Comparisons, between BC and Washington state,
and the US, Canada Norway, pretty compelling - (either we can spend our money on damage
control, or we can change the structures that
produce it in the ?rst place). - Sure BC spends more in taxes up front, but the
American taxpayer is probably paying more in
"after-the-fact" funds in the social welfare
arena (i.e. in the form of prisons, etc).
8Email responses from Session 9
- Sweden and Canada share one major feature
- Investing in Social Goods
- Education,
- health care all heavily subsidized
- Progressive tax
9Email responses from Session 9
- Enough evidence that the only way to improve
population health in U.S.is to reduce the gap
between the rich and the poor by redistributing
wealth, - why is the government going to other direction?
- Do they really care if U.S is in 25th or lower in
health Olympics? - Do they care of the poor?
- Do the rich people in this country think that it
is bad for them to be in 25th in health Olympics?
10Email responses from Session 9
- Universal insurance provides the opportunity for
health care which may do more harm than good. on
a population health level make little if any
difference. - Reason to support universal insurance is it does
provide a redistribution of wealth. - The stigmatism of free and reduced care is
diminished. If used to promote efficacious care
rather than more care, then indeed universal
health insurance may contribute to reducing heath
disparities.
11Too much information hazardous to our health?
- Japanese CEO salaries are not published, so
Japanese CEOs are not aware of how much their
counterparts are making. - When CEOs' salaries are revealed, adds pressure
to boards to raise more funds to attract and keep
CEO's happy. - This means companies shift more money towards CEO
salaries, - means less money is going towards getting better
health care coverage for all other employees.
12Email responses from Session 9
- When we, Japanese, are asked why are we so
health, we attribute it to our food. - My friends say Japanese prefer non-fat food and
eat less, while Americans are just the opposite.
13Email responses from Session 9
- Okinawa is the healthiest state in Japan, and
poorest. - Divorce rate of Okinawa is the highest in the
nation, before Osaka and Tokyo. - you can have social cohesion if you don't have
family cohesion - Okinawa's political participation is amazingly
low. It ranked 44th among 47 states in voter
turnout the latest Upper House national election
in 2000, despite a number of hot political
agendas such as US military presence, economic
development, and so on. - Okinawa infant mortality rate? No children's
hospital in Okinawa.
14Learning Objectives
- state the past achievements of Japans health
- present the health situation in Japan today
- list the features of Japans health care system
- discuss why a great disparity in health exists
between the Japanese and the American populations
in terms of health achievement - present a forecast of future problems that most
of the developed nations including the US and
Japan commonly share.
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16Shibuya, K., et al. (2002). Individual income,
income distribution, and self rated health in
Japan cross sectional analysis of nationally
representative sample. BMJ 324
- Data collected on household income, self rated
health, and other sociodemographic
characteristics at the individual level from
comprehensive survey of the living conditions of
people on health and welfare in a nationally
representative sample from each prefecture. - Setting Prefectures in Japan. Participants 80
899 people aged 15 years with full records in
survey. - Main outcome measures Dichotomous variable for
self rated health of each respondent (0 if
excellent, very good or good 1 if fair or poor).
Results Inequality in income at the prefecture
level measured by the Gini coefficient was
comparable with that in other industrialized
countries. - Unadjusted odds ratios show a 14 increased risk
(odds ratio 1.14, 95 confidence interval 1.02 to
1.27) in reporting poor or fair health for
individuals living in prefectures with higher
inequality in income. - After adjustment, individual income was more
strongly associated with self rated health than
income inequality. - Additional inclusion of regional effects showed
that median income at the prefecture level was
inversely related to self rated health.
Conclusions Individual income, probably relative
to the median prefecture income, has a stronger
association with self rated health than income
inequality at the prefecture level.
17Possible Reasons
- Very low reporting fair to poor health (0.8
poor, 9 fair) and only one validation study in
Japan - Dichomization of variable (fair-poor vs other 3)
- Japan has low levels of inequality compared to
the US and maybe there is a threshold to see
effects - Time lag between recent increase in inequality in
Japan and health effects (15 years in some
studies) - Prefecture the optimum level of aggregation?
- Income inequality effects may depend on specific
social and political characteristics (Income
inequality captures part of hierarchy)
18Health Olympics Age 80
Whites
Willcox 2001
Manton NEJM 1995
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24Mean Score on Total Battery
Second International Mathematics Study
7
0
6
0
5
0
J
a
p
a
n
C
a
n
a
d
a
4
0
r
a
c
e
Mean Percent Correct
d
3
0
2
0
1
0
0
92
1
1
1
2
2
2
6
3
8
4
2
5
3
6
9
7
1
8
1
9
1
Percentile Rank of Fathers Occupation
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26International Comparisons
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31Health Olympics Age 80
Whites
Willcox 2001
Manton NEJM 1995
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35Life Expectancy as a health measure
- Kobe earthquake in Jan 17, 1995 killed 5500
Japanese, yet the life expectancy drop was only
.04 years for females and .02 years for males in
Japan that year (calculated with and without
earthquake deaths) - Kosei no shihyo (Journal of Health and Welfare
Statistics) Special issue Kokumin eisei no doko
(Trends of Nation's Health) 2003 50 (9)p 420 - Armenian earthquake 1988 25000 died (pop 3 mil.)
- Effect of September 11, 2001 on NY state of US
life expectancy?
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37Health Care Public Health in Japan
- Medical School training
- No patient contact throughout entire period
- Can go out and practice, never having touched a
patient - Average doctor sees 75 patients a day
- No appointments (3 hour wait, 3 minute
consultation) - Hospital stays
- Very long ( one month)
- Must supply own cup for a drink, chopsticks for
meals - Men shower on M, W, F, women the other days
- Toilets down the hall, must supply soap, towel
and shampoo - Appendectomies (more common than in US)
- 60 of appendices removed were normal
- Public health 1000 measles deaths in 2002
38MacArthur Medicine
- Academic freedom,
- Free universal education,
- Right of workers to organize and bargain
collectively - Maximum Wage (65,000 yen in 1947 4333)
- Decentralization including breaking up zaibatsu
- and land reform (father had advocated in
Philippines) - "Controlled revolution"