Thomas Mayers
University of Tsukuba
17 Papers
1 Citations
Thomas Mayers is an academic researcher from University of Tsukuba. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Health care. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
Barriers to and facilitators of advance care planning implementation for medical staff after the COVID-19 pandemic: an overview of reviews
Ryota Inokuchi,Kyoko Hanari,Kensuke Shimada,Masao Iwagami,Ayaka Sakamoto,Yu Sun,Thomas Mayers,Takahiro Sugiyama,Nanako Tamiya +8 more
TL;DR: The implementation of ACP was further hindered by insufficient staff education on ACP in hospitals and facilities, as well as a scarcity of information sharing at the community level, and short-term staff training programmes and immediate information sharing could better enable ACP.
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International review of national-level guidelines on end-of-life care with focus on the withholding and withdrawing of artificial nutrition and hydration.
Thomas Mayers,Shiho Kashiwagi,Bryan J. Mathis,Makiko Kawabe,Joshua Gallagher,María Lisseth Morales Aliaga,Ichiro Kai,Nanako Tamiya +7 more
TL;DR: The purpose of the present study was to collate examples of end‐of‐life care guidelines from various counties, examine their contents, and gain an overall picture of how end-of-life care guidance is offered to physicians and care providers internationally.
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Health related quality of life and factors relevant to return to work in cancer survivors after hospital discharge: a descriptive cross-sectional study
Michiyo Mizuno,Noriko Munezawa,Mami Onizuka,Saori Kashiwa,Yumiko Inoue,Jun Kataoka,Ai Taniguchi,Thomas Mayers +7 more
TL;DR: In this article , the cross-sectional relationship between cancer survivors' return-to-work status and health-related quality of life (HR-QOL) following cancer diagnosis and treatment was examined.
Japanese Medical Students’ English Language Learning Motivation, Willingness to Communicate, and the Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic
Thomas Mayers,Bryan J. Mathis,Naoki Maki,Tetsuhiro Maeno +3 more
- 06 Dec 2023
TL;DR: It is revealed that Japanese medical students are strongly instrumentally and vocationally motivated, viewing English as a practical asset for their future medical careers, and exhibit a strong international posture, demonstrating an eagerness to engage with global cultures through English.
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