For the past 30 years, Koyama G has opened long-term care insurance facilities throughout the country, starting with health care for the elderly.
Looking at the area now, there are only towns that are said to be semi-mountainous areas and depopulated areas.
It was never the prefectural capital or its adjoining municipalities.
The prefectural border town is small, with no large companies, large factories, or large hospitals.
Surrounded by mountain peaks, the top of the mountain is the prefectural border.
The mountain range is like a fence surrounding the prefecture, and its slopes have been developed into ski resorts.
The population is less than 10,000, and the population decline is progressing more and more.
The prefectural border is not visited by the leading medical corporations, social welfare corporations, or prefectural hospitals.
Everyone wants to go to the big city.
Private corporations aim for Tokyo.
It is urban youth who aim for charm and social significance in depopulated areas.
Like I used to be.
Now, in two prefectures in the northern Kanto region, the government and medical schools are said to support the development of future medical professionals through agreements.
I’m very grateful, but I’m sure it’s a subsidy for raising salaries.
Money is important, thank you.
However, even if we pile up money and invite young doctors, how and who will train them as medical professionals?
A well-equipped senior doctor and, above all, a sick patient must come.
Now, all patients go to large hospitals in big cities, university hospitals.
Road conditions and railroad development made it easier to choose medical facilities than medical care.
The medical system has not caught up with changes in the actual situation on the patient side, with priority being given to administration, politics, and the convenience of doctors.
Jichi Medical University should have already been in charge of this system, but in towns and villages across the country and on prefectural borders, doctors are dispatched from universities in Tokyo at high salaries.
Still, doctors don’t settle.
The urban concentration of doctors cannot be stopped.
I think it would be a good idea to promote online medical care as a policy at university hospitals and support municipal hospitals on the prefectural border.
Even if there are only a few doctors, it is not possible to provide the current state-of-the-art medical care.
The days of red beard are long gone.
There can’t be blackjack.
Today, I will stop posting the number of employees who have tested positive for PCR tests.
Most of the time, there are 0 or 1 people every day, and it is a lot of work to verify that number.
Please understand.
Pulse oximeter 97/97/98
Blood sugar 165 Body temperature 36.4 degrees
Romance on the Prefectural Border
CEO Yasunari Koyama