Curriculum Vitaes

Tomosa Mine

  (峰 友紗)

Profile Information

Affiliation
Faculty of Education Department of Child Development, Musashino University
Degree
博士(医学)(東邦大学)

Researcher number
90587651
J-GLOBAL ID
201801009903866468
researchmap Member ID
B000346269

Research Interests

 2

Papers

 5
  • Satoshi Tsuboi, Tomosa Mine, Satoshi Kanke, Tetsuya Ohira
    Disaster medicine and public health preparedness, 15(6) 703-706, Dec, 2021  
    OBJECTIVES: On March 11, 2011, a magnitude 9 earthquake (the Great East Japan Earthquake) occurred off the east coast of Japan. After the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accidents, as of 2016, people were not allowed to live in the 6 districts (Tomioka, Okuma, Futaba, Namie, Katsurao, Iidate) in Fukushima Prefecture. In the present study, we aimed to evaluate the long-term effects of displacement on all-cause mortality in Fukushima Prefecture. METHODS: Data regarding population and deaths from 2009 to 2016 in Fukushima Prefecture were obtained from the governmental statistics. The age-adjusted all-cause mortality were compared among the 4 areas in Fukushima Prefecture; the Eastern, Middle, Western, and Displacement areas. RESULTS: The age-adjusted all-cause mortality rates in the Eastern and Displacement areas were higher than in the other 2 areas from 2009 to 2011. During the period from 2012 to 2016, all-cause mortality in the Displacement area decreased to the lowest, while the morality in the Eastern area remained the highest. CONCLUSIONS: Against all expectations, after the earthquake, all-cause mortality in the Displacement area was continuously lower than in the rest of the Fukushima Prefecture. Following disasters, long-term monitoring should be organized to meet local health-care needs.
  • Satoshi Tsuboi, Tomosa Mine, Tetsuhito Fukushima
    SN business & economics, 1(11) 150-150, 2021  
    Considering the variety of stakeholders surrounding hospitals, hospital financial distress should be understood as a social issue, rather than just a matter involving the hospital owners. The present study aimed to assess Japanese hospital insolvency and related factors based on a nationwide financial dataset, and to identify indicators of the risk of insolvency. The legal financial reports used included a balance sheet and a profit-and-loss statement of hospitals owned by healthcare corporations, representing about 70% of all Japanese hospitals. This case-control study with descriptive analyses was conducted to clarify the financial status of healthcare corporations and to assess associations between specific factors and insolvency. Insolvency was found in 5.9% of healthcare corporations in 2016. Insolvency was significantly associated with operational income per sales (odds ratio, 0.16), and both short- and long-term borrowings per sales (odds ratios: 1.46 and 1.22 in this order). The present study found that 5.9% of Japanese healthcare corporations were insolvent, and hospital profitability and borrowing (both short- and long-term) could be key factors related to preventing hospital insolvency in Japan. To maintain sustainable healthcare services by hospitals, decision makers should consider the risk of insolvency, and balance the amount of borrowings against sales.
  • Tomosa Mine, Satoshi Tsuboi, Fujiko Fukushima
    Frontiers in reproductive health, 3 772575-772575, 2021  
  • Satoshi Tsuboi, Tomosa Mine, Yumi Tomioka, Saeka Shiraishi, Fujiko Fukushima, Toshiharu Ikaga
    International Journal of Women's Health, Volume 11 31-39, Jan, 2019  
    BACKGROUND: Unlike traditional East Asian medicine, the necessity of health care services for cold extremities is yet to be acknowledged in Western medicine. In this study, we aimed to conduct an epidemiological evaluation of this unremarkable symptom among women in Japan. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A cross-sectional study was conducted from February 2016 to April 2017, and data of 238 women throughout Japan were analyzed. Questionnaires were used to examine participants' demographics, health-related behaviors, health status, and frequency of subjective symptoms over the past 1 year. The association between cold extremities and other subjective symptoms was examined by the multiple logistic regression analysis. RESULTS: The prevalences of mild and severe cold extremities were 49.6% and 35.3%, respectively. Temperature and utilization of health care services were not significantly different by the severity of cold extremities. The accompanying symptoms that were significantly associated with the cold extremities were shoulder stiffness, fatigue, low back pain, headache, nasal congestion, itching, injury, and difficulty hearing. After multiple logistic regression analysis, low back pain (OR: 4.91) and difficulty hearing (OR: 4.84) kept the significance. Factors related to cold extremities including mental quality of life, sleep quality, and habitual drinking were significantly associated with other accompanying symptoms. CONCLUSION: Women with cold extremities have various accompanying symptoms and health-risk behaviors. Symptomatic treatment for cold extremities may not be sufficient, and comprehensive care would be required.
  • Tomosa Mine, Taichiro Tanaka, Tadashi Nakasone, Toru Itokazu, Zentaro Yamagata, Yuji Nishiwaki
    Journal of epidemiology, 27(3) 112-116, Mar, 2017  
    BACKGROUND: Although several studies have focused on the association between maternal smoking during pregnancy and rapid weight gain (RWG) during infancy, the dose-response relationship has not yet been confirmed, and very few studies have included Asian populations. Using a record-linkage method, we examined the association between maternal smoking during pregnancy and RWG in infants at around 4 months of age to clarify the dose-response relationship. METHODS: Two databases were used: maternal check-ups during pregnancy and early infancy check-ups (between April 1, 2013 and March 31, 2014 in Okinawa, Japan) were linked via IDs and provided to us after unlinkable anonymizing. For 10,433 subjects (5229 boys and 5204 girls), we calculated the change in infants' weight z-score by subtracting the z-score of their birth weight from their weight at early infancy check-ups. Smoking exposure was categorized into five groups. We used Poisson regression to examine the association of maternal smoking during pregnancy with RWG in early infancy. RESULTS: Overall, 1524 (14.6%) were ex-smoker and 511 (4.9%) were current smoker. Compared with the reference category of non-smokers, the adjusted risk ratio of RWG was 1.18 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.06-1.32) for ex-smokers, 1.18 (95% CI, 0.93-1.50) for those who smoked 1-5 cigarettes per day, 1.57 (95% CI, 1.24-2.00) for those who smoked 6-10 cigarettes per day, and 2.13 (95% CI, 1.51-3.01) for those who smoked ≥11 cigarettes per day. There was a clear dose-response relationship. CONCLUSION: Our study suggests that maternal smoking during pregnancy is associated in a dose-dependent manner with increased risk of RWG in early infancy.

Misc.

 20

Professional Memberships

 3

Research Projects

 5