The Future of Hospital Medicine in Japan: Lessons From the United States Hospital Medicine System.

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
International Journal of General Medicine Pub Date : 2025-05-01 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.2147/IJGM.S520518
Tomoharu Suzuki, Kohta Katayama, Nathan Houchens, Sarah Hartley, Yasuharu Tokuda, Takashi Watari
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: To compare hospitalist roles and training systems between the United States (US) and Japan, identifying strengths and challenges to guide development of Japan's emerging hospital medicine program.

Methods: A qualitative, descriptive narrative study was conducted during a 10-day observational site visit to the Veterans Affairs Ann Arbor Healthcare System and University of Michigan Hospital in October 2022. Two experienced Japanese hospitalist authors independently observed clinical rounds, interprofessional meetings, and educational sessions. Data were collected through direct observation and structured discussions focusing on care-team structures, workflows, multidisciplinary collaboration, educational approaches, and quality improvement activities. The authors subsequently developed a comparative analysis report of Japan-US differences. Guided discussions based on this report were conducted with experienced US hospitalists and a pioneer physician of General Medicine in Japan to obtain expert commentary on the analyses. No quantitative data analysis or specific analytical software was utilized for this narrative comparison.

Results: The US hospitalist model demonstrated group practice approaches with shift-based schedules supporting work-life balance. Multidisciplinary teams actively incorporated residents and students in patient care, quality improvement, and teaching. Japan's traditional attending physician model emphasized continuity of care but showed high workloads and limited multidisciplinary integration. Japanese hospitalists faced challenges including extensive work hours, fewer specialized training opportunities in quality improvement and patient safety, and less robust team-based learning environments.

Conclusion: Incorporating elements from the US model-such as group practice with shift-based systems, enhanced multidisciplinary collaboration, and structured educational and quality improvement initiatives-could address workload issues and foster professional development in Japan's hospital medicine system while preserving valued aspects of continuity of care. These findings provide specific actionable guidance for healthcare administrators, medical education directors, and policymakers involved in developing Japan's hospitalist system, as well as to practicing Japanese hospitalists seeking to enhance their professional practice environments and educational frameworks.

日本医院医学的未来:美国医院医学制度的教训。
目的:比较美国和日本的医院医师角色和培训体系,确定优势和挑战,以指导日本新兴医院医学项目的发展。方法:在2022年10月对退伍军人事务安娜堡医疗保健系统和密歇根大学医院进行为期10天的观察性现场访问期间进行定性,描述性叙事研究。两位经验丰富的日本医院专家作者独立观察了临床查房、跨专业会议和教育会议。通过直接观察和结构化讨论收集数据,重点关注护理团队结构、工作流程、多学科协作、教育方法和质量改进活动。作者随后撰写了一份日美差异比较分析报告。在此报告的基础上,与经验丰富的美国医院医生和日本普通医学的先驱医生进行了指导讨论,以获得对分析的专家评论。没有使用定量数据分析或特定的分析软件进行叙述比较。结果:美国医院模型展示了小组实践方法与轮班为基础的时间表支持工作与生活的平衡。多学科团队积极将住院医师和学生纳入患者护理、质量改进和教学中。日本传统的主治医师模式强调护理的连续性,但工作量大,多学科整合有限。日本医院面临的挑战包括工作时间过长,在质量改进和患者安全方面的专业培训机会较少,以及以团队为基础的学习环境不健全。结论:结合美国模式的元素,如轮班制的小组实践、加强多学科合作、结构化的教育和质量改进举措,可以解决日本医院医学系统的工作量问题,促进专业发展,同时保持护理连续性的重要方面。这些发现为参与发展日本医院制度的医疗保健管理人员、医学教育主管和政策制定者,以及寻求加强其专业实践环境和教育框架的日本医院从业人员提供了具体的可操作指导。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
International Journal of General Medicine
International Journal of General Medicine Medicine-General Medicine
自引率
0.00%
发文量
1113
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal of General Medicine is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal that focuses on general and internal medicine, pathogenesis, epidemiology, diagnosis, monitoring and treatment protocols. The journal is characterized by the rapid reporting of reviews, original research and clinical studies across all disease areas. A key focus of the journal is the elucidation of disease processes and management protocols resulting in improved outcomes for the patient. Patient perspectives such as satisfaction, quality of life, health literacy and communication and their role in developing new healthcare programs and optimizing clinical outcomes are major areas of interest for the journal. As of 1st April 2019, the International Journal of General Medicine will no longer consider meta-analyses for publication.
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