T
Takuro Shimbo
Researcher at Honda
Publications - 192
Citations - 4712
Takuro Shimbo is an academic researcher from Honda. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Odds ratio. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 185 publications receiving 3954 citations. Previous affiliations of Takuro Shimbo include Kyoto Prefectural University & Kumamoto University.
Papers
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Potential Benefits and Harms of a Peer Support Social Network Service on the Internet for People With Depressive Tendencies: Qualitative Content Analysis and Social Network Analysis
TL;DR: An SNS for people with depressive tendencies provides various opportunities to obtain support that meets users’ needs, but it is recommended that participants do not use SNSs when they feel that the SNS is not user-selectable, when they get egocentric comments, when friends have a negative assessment of the S NS, or when they have additional psychological burden.
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Universal problems during residency: abuse and harassment.
TL;DR: Investigating mistreatment among resident doctors in Japan found that perceived abuse or harassment during residency has a negative impact on residents’ health and well‐being.
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Diagnosis of Helicobacter pylori infection in gastric mucosa by endoscopic features: A multicenter prospective study
TL;DR: A prospective multicenter study to establish the diagnosis of Helicobacter pylori infection in gastric mucosa by endoscopic features and endoscopic diagnosis of chronic gastritis was carried out.
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Longitudinal Study of the Decline in Renal Function in Healthy Subjects
Mika Baba,Takuro Shimbo,Masaru Horio,Masahiko Ando,Yoshinari Yasuda,Yasuhiro Komatsu,Katsunori Masuda,Seiichi Matsuo,Shoichi Maruyama +8 more
TL;DR: The reference values for the rate of eGFR decline stratified by gender, age, and renal stage in healthy subjects were clarified for the first time and depended mainly on baseline eG FR, but not on age, with a slower decline with a lower baseline e GFR.
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Association between weight gain, obesity, and sleep duration: a large-scale 3-year cohort study
TL;DR: Short sleep (≤5 h) is significantly associated with weight gain and obesity in both male and female adults.