FalconStor Japan and Fujitsu Software Technologies Enter into Business Partnership
FalconStor Japan and Fujitsu Software Technologies Enter into Business Partnership
FalconStor Software, Inc. (NASDAQ: FALC), the provider of TOTALLY Open data protection solutions, today announced that FalconStor Japan has …
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Categories: Call Center Solution Tags: Business, Enter, FalconStor, Fujitsu, into, Japan, Partnership, software, Technologies
NetLogic Microsystems’ Multi-Core Processors Power NTT DOCOMO’s Commercial LTE Mobile Network in Japan
NetLogic Microsystems’ Multi-Core Processors Power NTT DOCOMO’s Commercial LTE Mobile Network in Japan
NetLogic Microsystems, Inc. [NASDAQ: NETL], a worldwide leader in high-performance intelligent semiconductor solutions for next-generation Internet networks, today announced that its market-leading families of multi-core, multi-threaded processors have been designed into multiple equipment, from eNodeB base stations to Gateways, that are deployed in NTT DOCOMO’s commercial LTE mobile network in …
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Categories: Call Center Operations Tags: Commercial, DOCOMO’s, Japan, Microsystems’, Mobile, MultiCore, NetLogic, network, Power, Processors
Japan: Injured man dies after rejection by 14 hospitals. Where are the Samurai of the Triage programmers?
Injured man dies after rejection by 14 hospitals
Wed Feb 4, 7:51 PM
Is it Shinto or Buddhism or Capitalism or Democracy or the absence of Samurai?
By Mari Yamaguchi, The Associated Press
TOKYO – After getting struck by a motorcycle, an elderly Japanese man with head injuries waited in an ambulance as paramedics phoned 14 hospitals, each refusing to treat him.
He died 90 minutes later at the facility that finally relented – one of thousands of victims repeatedly turned away in recent years by understaffed and overcrowded hospitals in Japan.
Paramedics reached the accident scene within minutes after the man on a bicycle collided with a motorcycle in the western city of Itami. But 14 hospitals refused to admit the 69-year-old citing a lack of specialists, equipment and staff, according to Mitsuhisa Ikemoto, a fire department official.
The Jan. 20 incident was the latest in a string of recent cases in Japan in which patients were denied treatment, underscoring health care woes in a rapidly aging society that faces an acute shortage of doctors and a growing number of elderly patients.
One of the hospitals agreed to provide care when the paramedics called a second time more than an hour after the accident. But the man, who suffered head and back injuries, died soon afterward of shock from loss of blood.
The injured man might have survived if a hospital accepted him more quickly, Ikemoto said. “I wish hospitals are more willing to take patients, but they have their own reasons, too,” he said.
The motorcyclist, also hurt in the accident, was denied admission by two hospitals before a third accepted him, Ikemoto said. He was recovering from his injuries.
The death prompted the city to issue a directive ordering paramedics to better co-ordinate with an emergency call centre so patients can find a hospital within 15 minutes. But hospitals cannot be punished for turning away patients if they are full.
Similar problems have occurred frequently in recent years. More than 14,000 emergency patients were rejected at least three times by Japanese hospitals before getting treatment in 2007, the latest government survey showed.
In the worst case, a woman in her 70s with a breathing problem was rejected 49 times in Tokyo.
There was also the high-profile death of a pregnant woman in western Nara city in 2006 that prompted the government to establish a panel to look into the hospitals’ practice of refusing care.
In that case, the woman was refused admission by 19 hospitals that said they were full. She died eight days later from a brain hemorrhage after falling unconscious during birth.
Health Minister Yoichi Masuzoe told a parliamentary committee last year that the rising number of elderly patients hospitalized for months was taking up space that could be used to treat emergency cases.
Masuzoe urged the development of a community-wide support system to ease the burden on hospitals. The government also announced plans to increase the number of doctors and improve co-ordination among ambulances, emergency call centres and hospitals.
I didn’t expect you folks to be so defensive. Two of you asked what is my Q, even though it is plain enough: where are samurai of the Triage system? How can you ask where is the Q when it is hat which closes my ask? Duhh…I guess somebody is upset that I asked. Let me explain: professionally i am concerned to improve such decision making which is why I asked your opinions. Thanks v v to those who dared to answer the Q I asked, & to others I say – relax, you are not being personally insulted. And pur-lease, answer the Q asked and don’t resist it so strenuously We should all be in the Business of saving lives, and no I am not Japanese.
Some of you projected onto me your own prejudices. I use ‘samurai’ as an image of valor actually. I use images of the most courageous, loyal and valiant forceful Japanese. The search for the samurai spirit in government/private medicine is the search for people who don’t supinely acquiesce in the status quo, but try to EXERT their brains to think of alternatives. That man’s death is one in which the bell tolls for us all. Please, loosen up your thinking! Remember the Seven Samurai who became the Magnificent Seven in their American adaptation? They were heroes defending the undertrodden just as I try to do in my work. Join me! Don’t et hardening of the intellectual arteries so soon!
Categories: Call Center Equipment Tags: after, dies, hospitals., injured, Japan, programmers, rejection, Samurai, Triage
