Improvement of an unhealthy lifestyle decreases the risk of incidence and mortality from lifestyle-related disease. One method for the improvement of an unhealthy lifestyle is interviewing for health and consultation regarding a healthy lifestyle to recipients of health checkups by public health nurses. Original articles in occupational health for recipients' evaluation in health checkups as longitudinal studies are rare.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNumerous epidemiologic studies have revealed that smoking is a significant risk factor of many diseases. Some studies reported increase in medical expenditure by smoking using odds or hazard ratios between smoking and diseases in epidemiologic studies. The purpose of the present study is to investigate the ratios of mean medical expenditures between smokers and nonsmokers from studies conducted observing medical expenditure directly in Japan.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe absorption rate of cadmium (Cd) in the digestive organs is reported to be 0.5-8% in Friberg's textbook. This value was obtained from experimental studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The aim of this study was to determine priorities for specific intractable disease from the viewpoint of countermeasures.
Methods: A significance evaluation to provide a priority framework for intractable disease was performed with a questionnaire distributed to the staff of preventive medicine and public health departments of medical schools in Japan. To determine the actual conditions of these intractable diseases question were directed at the chairmen of individual clinical study groups.
Improving an unhealthy lifestyle decreases risk of incidence and death of lifestyle-related diseases. Consultation about a healthy lifestyle to recipients of health checkups conducted by public health nurses is one method for such improvement. The objective in the present study was to investigate the difference between consciousness of intervention by (1) the public health nurses who conducted consultations with recipients of health checkups and (2) the recipients who were consulted by the public health nurses.
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