Chapter 26 Traditional Medicine Included in ICD-11 has Been Released, Till Now and From Now On The Report from the Terminology and Classification Committee of the Japan Society for Oriental Medicine

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), mortality by age, sex, and cause of death is the foun­dation of public health both globally and domestically. Comparable mortality statistics over time and investi­gations of mortality were used to develop the International Statistical Classification...

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Published inKampo Medicine Vol. 70; no. 2; pp. 167 - 174
Main Authors YAKUBO, Shuji, NAMIKI, Takao, ITO, Michiho, HOSHINO, Takayuki, OKUMI, Hirokuni, AMANO, Yosuke, TSUDA, Tokutaro, TOGO, Toshihiro, YAMAGUCHI, Kojiro, WATSUJI, Tadashi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Japanese
Published The Japan Society for Oriental Medicine 2019
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Summary:According to the World Health Organization (WHO), mortality by age, sex, and cause of death is the foun­dation of public health both globally and domestically. Comparable mortality statistics over time and investi­gations of mortality were used to develop the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD). In the ICD, the WHO states that morbidity statistics are also an essential foundation of public health, but they are much less widely applied. The 10th revision of the ICD (ICD-10) is now in use, but further revisions must be made in the development of the 11th revision (ICD-11) to capture advances in health science and medical practice, to make better use of the digital revolution, and to evaluate traditional medicine (TM). Revision of ICD-10 began in 2007, and an ICD-11 version for preparing implementation was released on July 18, 2018. ICD-11 features a new TM chapter on Japanese traditional medicine, known as Kampo medicine, traditional Chinese medicine, and Korean medicine. ICD-11 will be approved at the next World Health Assembly in May 2019 and will come into effect. This means that the WHO does not currently recognize the effects of TM, but that we as well as the WHO will have hard time to prepare and study the effects of TM on morbidity statistics. It is very important to the study of Kampo medicine that we will be able to properly evaluate the terms and classifications contained in ICD-11.
ISSN:0287-4857
1882-756X
DOI:10.3937/kampomed.70.167