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Satoko Mitani

Researcher at Kyoto University

Publications -  27
Citations -  716

Satoko Mitani is an academic researcher from Kyoto University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 26 publications receiving 655 citations. Previous affiliations of Satoko Mitani include Gifu University of Medical Science & Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine.

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Journal Article

The Japan Multi-Institutional Collaborative Cohort Study (J-MICC Study) to detect gene-environment interactions for cancer.

Nobuyuki Hamajima, +110 more
TL;DR: The Japan Multi-institutional Collaborative Cohort Study (J-MICC Study) launched in 2005, supported by a research grant for Scientific Research on Special Priority Areas of Cancer, is expected to produce many findings on lifestyle and genetic traits associated with lifestyle-related diseases including cancer among Japanese.
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Impact of post-traumatic stress disorder and job-related stress on burnout: a study of fire service workers.

TL;DR: Stressors that impacted on burnout in fire service personnel were PTSD-related acute stress and general job-related chronic stress, and relationships were found between PTSD and burnout, and between job stressors and burn out.
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Profile of participants and genotype distributions of 108 polymorphisms in a cross-sectional study of associations of genotypes with lifestyle and clinical factors: a project in the Japan Multi-Institutional Collaborative Cohort (J-MICC) Study

TL;DR: This comprehensive data collection on lifestyle and clinical factors will be useful for elucidating gene–environment interactions and is likely to be an informative reference tool, as free access to genotype data for a large Japanese population is not readily available.
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Effect of autogenic training on cardiac autonomic nervous activity in high-risk fire service workers for posttraumatic stress disorder

TL;DR: Autogenic training is effective for ameliorating the disturbance of cardiac autonomic nervous activity and psychological issues secondary to PTSD.