Keio University

[Feature: The Future of Preventive Medicine] Kumiko Yazaki: Healthcare that Walks Alongside Each Individual's Life—The Center for Preventive Medicine's Challenge Toward Future-Style Preventive Medicine

Publish: November 06, 2023

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  • Kumiko Yazaki

    Research Centers and Institutes Administrative Director, Center for Preventive Medicine

    Kumiko Yazaki

    Research Centers and Institutes Administrative Director, Center for Preventive Medicine

From Ningen Dock to Personalized Dock

Center for Preventive Medicine was established in 2012 on the 3rd floor of Building 3 (South Wing). Since its opening, our center has valued high-precision testing and medical care that emphasizes individuality. The target of the Center for Preventive Medicine is not those with clear diseases requiring treatment, but rather those without diseases to be treated, or those in the "pre-symptomatic" (fluctuating) stage without subjective symptoms. Therefore, the way of thinking and approaching "health" and "prevention" differs for each individual.

Many of the people who visit our center live their lives while managing various physical issues, whether large or small. Furthermore, even if one says "I don't feel well," the state can range from needing hospitalization and treatment because it interferes with daily life, to being able to lead a stable daily life as long as one does not overexert themselves despite some symptoms. Moreover, because these states are constantly fluctuating and changing, anxiety remains if everyone simply undergoes the same test items once a year. We believe it is important for patients to undergo their own unique testing menu, proposing a menu suited to that individual and adding additional tests if necessary.

Generally, the management of Ningen Dock (comprehensive health checkups) requires many people to undergo examinations; therefore, unifying the testing menu as much as possible leads to efficient operation and is economically effective. However, at our center, based on the basic concept of "Healthcare that walks alongside each individual's life," we do not limit the testing menu, but allow examinees to tailor-make their tests according to their own wishes. For this reason, we call it a "Personalized Dock" rather than a "Ningen Dock."

In the Personalized Dock, we provide three basic courses to comprehensively check health status with the aim of early detection of lifestyle-related diseases (a course with upper gastrointestinal endoscopy, a course without upper gastrointestinal endoscopy, and a course where upper gastrointestinal endoscopy and colonoscopy are performed in one day). After selecting one of the three basic courses, you can create an original testing menu for each individual by freely adding from 8 specialized sets (Heart/Vascular Set, Brain Imaging Set, Ladies' Set, etc.) and 19 individual optional tests (PET-CT, Holter ECG, sleep apnea test) (there are some restrictions, such as certain combinations of tests not being possible on the same day).

Main Features of the Personalized Dock

The Personalized Dock provided by the Center for Preventive Medicine does not simply perform tests. While based on "reliable diagnosis by specialists and technicians belonging to Keio University Hospital," we take a preventive medicine approach centered on dialogue, including "pre-test interviews by nurses," "explanation of results by doctors after tests," and "post-test follow-up by preventive medicine coordinators."

In preventive medicine, it is of course important to find diseases at the earliest possible stage based on accurate diagnostic capabilities, but it is also important to have people improve their lifestyle habits so that they do not get sick in the first place. High-precision medical care based on scientific evidence is necessary to find diseases, but dialogue with the examinee is extremely important for improving lifestyle habits. Lifestyles vary from person to person, and ways of thinking about health also differ. Maintaining solid scientific evidence while engaging in repeated dialogue with examinees, respecting each individual's values, and staying close to their anxieties and hopes—that is the form of personalized, future-style preventive medicine we aim for.

After moving to Azabudai Hills, while continuing these features of the Center for Preventive Medicine, we have updated almost all medical equipment to the latest models and created an environment that allows for higher-precision testing. We have also designed the space with consideration for the privacy of examinees. For example, we have separated the waiting areas for before and after changing into examination clothes, and in the endoscopy recovery room, we have made it possible to partition each person with curtains so they can rest without worrying about the gaze of others. Additionally, all colonoscopy preparation rooms have been made private, with dedicated toilets installed in each room.

Whether the reason for visiting is an examination or treatment, few people feel at ease in a hospital space. This time, by stepping out of the hospital space and establishing ourselves in the "city" of Azabudai Hills, we aimed to create an environment where people can relax as much as possible.

Preventive Medicine Membership

Looking toward the future of preventive medicine, we newly established the "Preventive Medicine Membership" on the occasion of the move to Azabudai Hills. The "Preventive Medicine Membership" is the first membership-based medical service attempted by a university hospital, and it is also a challenge toward thorough personalized medicine.

Opening at Azabudai Hills

The Center for Preventive Medicine will open at Azabudai Hills Mori JP Tower on Monday, November 6, 2023. Moving the "Center for Preventive Medicine" from the main hospital in Shinanomachi to Azabudai Hills was a very big decision for us. This is because it is the first time in the 100-year history of Keio University Hospital that an organization of the main hospital has moved outside the Shinanomachi premises. While there is great anxiety, anxiety is also the seed of hope. In response to the social issue of "extending healthy life expectancy in a super-aging society," which Japan cannot avoid in the future, we at the Center for Preventive Medicine will strive to promote future-style preventive medicine while keeping in mind "healthcare that walks alongside each individual's life."

[Address]

5F Azabudai Hills Mori JP Tower, 1-3-1 Azabudai, Minato-ku, Tokyo 106-0041

Keio University Center for Preventive Medicine

[Nearest Stations]

Tokyo Metro Hibiya Line, Kamiyacho Station (11-minute walk)

Tokyo Metro Namboku Line, Roppongi-itchome Station (10-minute walk)

Keio University Center for Preventive Medicine (Main)

Reception Hours: Mon–Fri, 2nd, 4th, and 5th Saturdays 8:30 AM – 5:00 PM

Closed: Sundays, Public Holidays, 1st and 3rd Saturdays, Year-end and New Year holidays (Dec 30 – Jan 4)

* Closed days follow the schedule determined by Keio University Hospital.

TEL: 03-5843-6085

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* Affiliations and titles are as of the time this magazine was published.