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Dr. Guy Harris President, Digital Medical
Communications Corp. Tokyo, Japan harris@dmed.com
In the November 1996 issue of Telemedicine Today I
wrote, "Japan is at the edge of a major push into telemedicine." Since that
time, however, progress has slowed considerably. While the number of active
programs jumped from 49 in 1995, to 98 in 1996 and to 148 in 1997, only 7 new
programs have been identified this year, indicating that the expected boom has
failed to materialized.
While Table 1 suggests that Japan is perhaps second
only to the United States in overall telemedicine activity, the lack of
reimbursement under the national health insurance scheme has dampened
enthusiasm and little telemedicine service has developed.
Reasons are not hard to find. Dr. Yoshiyuki Matsumoto,
Director of the Medical Technology Information Promotion Division at the
Ministry of Health and Welfare (Koseisho) and the man directly
responsible for telemedicine policy, states that current cost-effectiveness
data are insufficient to justify reimbursement. Other interviewees report that
this problem is exacerbated by Japans relatively under-developed health
economics field and a lack of technical evaluative expertise within the
ministry.
A second barrier is cultural. Dr. Kiyonari Inamura and
Prof. Takashi Sawai, leaders in teleradiology and telepathology, respectively,
both acknowledge informal enthusiasm for telemedicine within the ministry.
However, they and others cite a generation gap here and in the medical
profession at large, with younger participants unable to overcome the
resistance of older entrenched interests. Unlike the USAs National
Library of Medicine, for example, which recently provided significant funding
to 21 telemedicine projects, Koseishos financial support is
largely limited to incidental funding of expert advisory groups. It is
currently funding 5 telecare projects, but these are uncoordinated and the
ministry has no clear idea of the results it seeks to obtain.
Overall development is also hindered by a lack of
hospital information systems infrastructure. Dr. Hiroshi Mizushima, Head of
Bioinformatics at the National Cancer Center (Koseishos lead
institute for telemedicine) reports that unlike the Ministry of Agriculture,
Fisheries and Forestry, for example, which is installing an extensive intranet
planned eventually to link with its confreres in other Asian countries,
Koseisho does not consider network development within its jurisdiction.
Prof. Patrick Barron of Tokyo Medical College notes that this absence of
government support means that Japan is missing an important opportunity to
provide leadership in Asia-Pacific countries. Dr. Mizushima currently obtains
much of his support from other ministries, such as those of Posts and
Telecommunications and International Trade and Industry. He states that while
most hospitals will be linked to networks within the next several years, senior
physicians show little interest in telemedicine and that widespread
implementation must await generational change.
The above notwithstanding, a number of innovative
programs and studies may be identified. A 1997 study funded by Koseisho
identified the first telemedicine study in Japan to be conducted in Wakayama
Prefecture in 1971, involving closed circuit television and facsimile
transmission of sound and images. As occurred elsewhere, none of the various
programs started in the 70s survived the decade. But at last Mays
3rd International Conference on the Medical Aspects of Telemedicine
in Kobe, Japanese authors presented a total of 101 papers. Highlights included
the work of Dr. Katsuyuki Miyasaka and colleagues at the National
Childrens Hospital. In a group of children requiring long-term
respiratory care, an ISDN-mediated videophone link with the hospital reduced
the number of unscheduled emergency room visits by close to 80%, and also the
number of calls to the hospital as families gained greater confidence in the
operation of ventilation equipment.
In other recent work, Dr. Isao Nakajima of Tokai
Medical School has partnered with Hitachi to develop a satellite-mediated
ambulance data transmission system. Due to the particular orbit of the
satellite used and an innovative dish tracking system developed by Dr.
Nakajima, data transmission from a moving ambulance remains largely
uninterrupted, even in highly built-up areas.
Dr. Keiko Nakamura of Tokyo Medical and Dental
University has also described the second and third phases of her widely
reported home telecare study. The second phase was designed to investigate
provider acceptance of telecare: 13 medical and ancillary staff at a local
municipality center used ISDN videoconferencing equipment from Fujitsu to care
for a total of 45 homebound patients. The staff were aware of the good results
of the first phase (described in Telemedicine Today Vol. 3, #3) but
showed strong resistance to participation, considering the system suitable only
for professional community rehabilitation experts and requiring technological
expertise beyond their ability. However, their attitude markedly changed as
they observed the satisfaction shown by the patients.
Two cases were of particular note. The first was an
85-year-old woman bedridden for one year following abdominal surgery, whose
continual demands had exhausted her family. With videoconference access to the
providers, however, her mental condition rapidly improved. Her complaints
largely ceased, she took an interest in her appearance (e.g., she began wearing
of make-up), and she was eventually able to leave her bed with assistance and
venture into the garden.
The second was a severely demented 73-year-old woman
living with her son and receiving frequent home nursing visits. Although she
was unable to communicate with providers, she showed sufficient understanding
of the presence of the monitor. Both her son and nurses reported a marked
change in her emotional status. In one 2-day period during which she refused
food, the need for urgent hospitalization, which would otherwise have been
missed, was identified by videophone and hospitalization was averted.
Phase 3 was an intervention study in which two groups
each of 16 age-, sex- and condition-matched patients were treated by
conventional home nursing or with telecare. Although total contact time per
patient was the same, the telecare group showed significantly better
improvements in activities of daily living (ADL), communication independence
and social cognition independence scores as a result of the greater frequency
of contact (mean 15 minutes per contact) and the ability to see the
patients home environment. The study will soon be reported in Medical
Care, the journal of the American Public Health Association. A Phase 4
cost-effectiveness study is now in preparation.
Finally, Secoms world-leading Hospi-net
teleradiology service shows continued growth. In the absence of reimbursement,
the service now provides 6,000 CT and MR readings per month from 125 spokes.
General Manager Mr. Takashi Kobayashi expects to reach financial break-even at
150 spokes.
Commercial interest in telemedicine is high,
particularly for telecare. Note that Koseisho predicts Japans
over-65 ratio will reach 25.7% of total population by 2020, well above that of
Germany, the next highest at 20.9%). Prof. Inamura recruited a "whos who"
of Japanese electronics companies to exhibit at the Kobe conference, a total of
42 in all. A recent issue of the Nikkei, Japans Wall Street
Journal, contained back-to-back full-page ads announcing telecare services.
The vendors evidently considered profile-building in these early days worth the
approx. US$150,000 price tag for each ad. Hitachi recently ran a humorous
national TV campaign describing its telemedicine plans, surely a world first.
Others have followed. But in the absence of reimbursement, no one yet seems to
have figured out how services can be provided profitably.
Overall, telemedicine in Japan can be described as
progressive but lacking integration or any cohesive planning. Many projects are
conducted on an ad hoc basis, relying less on needs analysis than on
relationships among medical school alumni. Prof. Inamura, a medical engineer,
notes that Japanese technology in the field is world-best, but with
insufficient engineering expertise within institutions, it is prone to
misapplication through single-source vendor push of non-standards-based
equipment. A group such as the Association of Telemedicine Service Providers
would find few members here, and a telemedicine business newsletter recently
ceased publication after only 8 issues. And yet, all interviewees for this
report expressed optimism for the future, and expect considerable progress over
the coming two to three years.
Finally, the language barrier means that many
researchers in Japan remain unaware of what is happening overseas. While
domestic publication is highly developed, with over 100,000 biomedical papers
appearing annually, few Japanese telemedicine reports make it into the English
literature. Nevertheless, the field remains filled with enthusiasts and some
exciting programs and technology. Researchers in other countries would do well
to seek out contacts with their counterparts in Japan.
Telemedicine Installations in Japan (Feb. 1998)
| Application |
In clinical
operation |
Pilot |
Total |
| Radiology |
47 |
21 |
68 |
| Pathology |
18 |
8 |
26 |
| Genl medical
imaging |
18 |
5 |
23 |
| Home health |
6 |
14 |
20 |
| Ophthalmology |
4 |
2 |
6 |
| Dental |
3 |
0 |
3 |
| Other |
3 |
6 |
9 |
|
Total |
99 |
56 |
155 |
Source: Prof. Kiyonari Inamura, Osaka University
Originally published in Gekkan Shin Iriyo |