Rinsho Shinkeigaku (Clinical Neurology)

The 48th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Neurology

The present issues to advocate rights of patients with neurological diseases in Japan

Yugo Narita, M.D.

Mie University Hospital, Medical Care Networking Center

To advocate patient's right is an inevitable assignment of all neurologists who have clinical activities for patients with neurological diseases, though the assignment has very broad fields and is impossible to perform by one. The author summarized present issues of guardianship, the program to protect the social welfare rights in communities, and advance directives for patients with neurological diseases. The new guardianship for adults in Japan started in 2000 and has been increasingly used mainly for the demented. Proxy decision making for a medical care by the guardian is still unsettled. The author raised a possible question on identification of the person who wants medical certification for guardianship and his/her intention to obtain such a document, in order to avoid unexpected troubles in the family or involved parties. Replies about the identification from an inspector at a family court, lawyers, judicial scriveners, social workers and Japan National Council of Social Welfare were shown on the table. In May 2007, the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare presented the guideline of process to decide the end-of-life-care. But advance directives for medical cares are still controversial in Japan. Multidisciplinary team to advocate patients' rights was stressed in this presentation.

(CLINICA NEUROL, 47: 779|782, 2007)
key words: guardianship, identification, proxy decision making for medical cares, advance directives

(Received: 16-May-07)