Kashima Saori, Inoue Kazuo, Matsumoto Masatoshi
Department of Public Health and Health Policy, Graduate School of Biomedical and Health Sciences, Hiroshima University, Hiroshima, Japan.
Department of Community Medicine, Chiba Medical Center, Teikyo University School of Medicine, Chiba, Japan.
PLoS One. 2017 May 25;12(5):e0178020. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0178020. eCollection 2017.
The Great East Japan Earthquake occurred on 11 March 2011 near the northeast coast of the main island, 'Honshu', of Japan. It wreaked enormous damage in two main ways: a giant tsunami and an accident at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (FDNPP). This disaster may have affected the distribution of physicians in the region. Here, we evaluate the effect of the disaster on the distribution of hospital physicians in the three most severely affected prefectures (Iwate, Miyagi, and Fukushima).
We obtained individual information about physicians from the Physician Census in 2010 (pre-disaster) and 2012 (post-disaster). We examined geographical distributions of physicians in two ways: (1) municipality-based analysis for demographic evaluation; and (2) hospital-based analysis for geographic evaluation. In each analysis, we calculated the rate of change in physician distributions between pre- and post-disaster years at various distances from the tsunami-affected coast, and from the restricted area due to the FDNPP accident.
The change in all, hospital, and clinic physicians were 0.2%, 0.7%, and -0.7%, respectively. In the municipality-based analysis, after taking account of the decreased population, physician numbers only decreased within the restricted area. In the hospital-based analysis, hospital physician numbers did not decrease at any distance from the tsunami-affected coast. In contrast, there was a 3.3% and 2.3% decrease in hospital physicians 0-25 km and 25-50 km from the restricted area surrounding the FDNPP, respectively. Additionally, decreases were larger and increases were smaller in areas close to the FDNPP than in areas further away.
Our results suggest that the tsunami did not affect the distribution of physicians in the affected regions. However, the FDNPP accident changed physician distribution in areas close to the power plant.
2011年3月11日,东日本大地震发生在日本主岛本州岛的东北海岸附近。这场灾难造成了巨大破坏,主要体现在两个方面:巨大的海啸以及福岛第一核电站事故。这场灾难可能影响了该地区医生的分布。在此,我们评估这场灾难对受灾最严重的三个县(岩手县、宫城县和福岛县)医院医生分布的影响。
我们获取了2010年(灾难前)和2012年(灾难后)医生普查中的个体信息。我们通过两种方式研究医生的地理分布:(1)基于市町村的分析用于人口统计学评估;(2)基于医院的分析用于地理评估。在每次分析中,我们计算了灾难前后不同距离处医生分布的变化率,这些距离是从受海啸影响的海岸以及福岛第一核电站事故导致的限制区域开始计算的。
所有医生、医院医生和诊所医生的变化率分别为0.2%、0.7%和 -0.7%。在基于市町村的分析中,考虑到人口减少因素后,只有限制区域内的医生数量减少。在基于医院的分析中,距离受海啸影响海岸的任何距离处,医院医生数量都没有减少。相比之下,距离福岛第一核电站周边限制区域0 - 25公里和25 - 50公里处的医院医生数量分别减少了3.3%和2.3%。此外,靠近福岛第一核电站的地区减少幅度更大,增加幅度更小,而距离较远的地区则相反。
我们的结果表明,海啸并未影响受灾地区医生的分布。然而,福岛第一核电站事故改变了核电站附近地区的医生分布。