Hospitals
Introduction of hospital wards
Floor-by-floor description
1st floor, Outpatient Care
In addition to general hospital courses such as internal medicine, geriatrics, pediatrics, anorectal surgery, surgery, orthopedics, gastroenterology, cardiovascular medicine, respiratory medicine, dermatology, rehabilitation medicine, and anesthesiology, we also provide outpatient dementia treatment as the Gunma Prefecture Medical Center for Dementia Diseases.
2nd floor, Department of Community Comprehensive Care Inpatient Care Management 1 (20 beds)
Patients who have completed the acute stage of treatment need to be discharged from the hospital as soon as possible. For patients and their families who are anxious about their treatment at home or in a facility, or who are expected to improve and stabilize with further inpatient treatment, we provide support so that they can be discharged with peace of mind in the "Community Comprehensive Care Unit".
2nd floor: General ward for disabled facilities (29 beds)
We aim to maintain ADL (activities of daily living) and improve QOL (quality of life) for patients with severe disabilities and neurological intractable diseases, and especially actively provide rehabilitation services for neurological intractable diseases. Medical staff such as doctors, nurses, pharmacists, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, speech therapists and nutritionists, and administrative staff such as medical social workers and medical clerks hold regular conferences to provide services that are close to patients and their families to help them resolve their concerns about life at home after discharge.
The following diseases are eligible for this program. We will provide specialized treatment for each disease.
1. severely physically handicapped (excluding post-stroke syndrome and dementia)
2. those with severe disabilities such as spinal cord injury (excluding post-stroke syndrome and dementia)
3. severely impaired consciousness
4. muscular dystrophy
5. those with neurological intractable diseases
- multiple sclerosis
- myasthenia gravis
- SMON
- amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
- spinocerebellar degeneration
- Huntington's disease
- Parkinson's disease-related disorders
- multiple system atrophy
- prion disease
- subacute sclerosing panencephalitis
- Moyamoya disease (viral arterial ring occlusion)
3rd floor, Recovery Rehabilitation Unit I (50 beds)
The condition one to two months after the onset of symptoms that have begun to stabilize after acute treatment for cerebrovascular disease or fracture surgery is called the convalescent phase. A convalescent rehabilitation ward is a ward that provides intensive rehabilitation during this convalescent period in order to regain the abilities that have declined.
The hospital provides intensive rehabilitation to patients in the convalescent phase, with the aim of preventing bedridden patients from becoming bedridden and returning to society and home, based on the rehabilitation program for each patient, by a team of various specialists including not only doctors and nurses but also care workers, physical therapists, and occupational therapists. In addition to physicians and nurses, care workers, physical therapists, occupational therapists, and other specialists work as a team to provide intensive rehabilitation services.
4th floor: Long-term care healthcare facility for the elderly, general wing (50 beds)
A geriatric healthcare facility is a facility that supports the independence of elderly people who need nursing care and provides comprehensive assistance to help them return to their homes. Our group's elderly healthcare facility, Daisei-en, is attached to a hospital, so there is no need to worry if there is a sudden change in health condition.
5th floor: Interaction space for users and family members
This is a communication lounge for the facility's residents. People can spend time with their family members or with each other.
6th floor: Long-term care healthcare facility for the elderly, specializing in dementia (50 beds)
We provide comprehensive assistance to dementia patients to help them return to their homes. We are committed to helping patients regain a sense of purpose and confidence in their lives by giving them a role in their lives.
[Manual of Care for Zero Physical Restraints] ~Daiseikai Style