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[Event Report] The 25th Annual Conference of the Japan Society of Disaster Nursing, Workshop I – Considering Disasters and Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) (September 3, 2023)

Summary

On Sunday, September 3, 2023, Health and Global Policy Institute (HGPI) led Workshop I – “Considering Disasters and Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR)” at the 25th Annual Conference of the Japan Society of Disaster Nursing in Himeji City, Hyogo Prefecture.

It is said that healthcare during times of emergency is in a state of imbalance among those who require care on the demand side and healthcare providers or necessary goods on the supply side. In the field of AMR, there tends to be continuous supply-side instability even during periods of non-emergency due to supply shortages and lagging R&D for new antimicrobials. Given these circumstances, if multiple major disasters caused by earthquakes or typhoons were to occur during the same period or at the same time, it could exacerbate AMR-related problems or shortages in the antimicrobial supply. This could trigger a major imbalance in supply and demand and result in another disaster in the form of an AMR outbreak.

Furthermore, the COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated that concepts from crisis management are indispensable in infectious disease control. AMR has also been called a “silent pandemic” because it is difficult to grasp circumstances during the expansion of an AMR outbreak.

Based on our recognition of this issue, Workshop I was held to examine AMR control from the perspectives of disaster measures and crisis management. Together with our fellow participants, who serve in the field of disaster nursing and possess a vast amount of experience in crisis response for COVID-19 and major disasters, we identified current issues and examined future countermeasures for AMR, an area in which outbreaks can occur and expand unnoticed.

This conference was held in Himeji City, which joined AMR Alliance Japan (Secretariat: HGPI) as an administrative district in 2021. In addition to presenting its “Municipal Declaration on the Promotion of AMR Countermeasures” in 2022, Himeji City is making various efforts for AMR control.

 


Key points of the discussion

 

[Event overview]

 

[Program] (Titles omitted)

11:00-11:05 Explanatory introduction 1: Introduction
  Yui Kohno (Manager, HPGI)
   
11:05-11:10 Explanatory Introduction 2: Disasters and AMR
  Kai Shigeno (Senior Associate, HGPI)
   
11:10-11:25 Guest lecture 1: AMR-Related Issues in Emergency Medical Settings
  Masashi Kasai (Director, Department of Infectious Diseases, Hyogo Prefectural Kobe Children’s Hospital)
   
11:25-11:40 Guest lecture 2: The Role of Nurses in AMR Control
  Yoshiko Nabetani (Deputy Director of Nursing, Department of Infection Control and Division of Nursing, Osaka University Hospital; Certified Nurse for Infection Control (CNIC))
   
11:40-12:00 Discussion – Considering Disasters and AMR
  Four speakers and audience participants

 


■ Speaker profiles

Masashi Kasai (Director, Department of Infectious Diseases, Hyogo Prefectural Kobe Children’s Hospital)
Dr. Masashi Kasai graduated from Toyama Medical and Pharmaceutical University in 1998. After training in the pediatric department of a city hospital and providing intensive care, general medicine, and infectious disease treatment at a pediatric hospital, he came to recognize the importance of preserving antimicrobials for future generations of children. Since assuming his current role at the Hyogo Prefectural Kobe Children’s Hospital Department of Infectious Diseases in January 2016, he has worked with fellow pediatric infectious disease specialists throughout Japan in efforts focusing on unrefined AMR control measures in community pediatric care settings.

Yoshiko Nabetani (Deputy Director of Nursing, Department of Infection Control and Division of Nursing, Osaka University Hospital; Certified Nurse for Infection Control (CNIC))
After joining Osaka University Hospital, Ms. Yoshiko Nabetani served in the Gastroenterological Surgery unit of the Department of Surgery and the Hematology and Oncology unit in the Department of Medicine before transferring to the Department of Infection Control in April 2003. She became a Certified Nurse for Infection Control (CNIC) in 2004 and was appointed the Deputy Director of the department in April 2007. She completed a Master’s degree in Infection Control and Nursing at International University of Health and Welfare Graduate School of Nursing in March 2012. She has served as Deputy Director of Nursing of the Department of Nursing since April 2017. She serves as a Board Member of the Japanese Society for Infection Prevention and Control and belongs to the Infection Control Network of Japan, the Japanese Society of Infectious Diseases, the Japan Academy of Nursing Science, and the Japan Academy of Nursing Administration and Policies.

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