Background
Shigetaka Takashima was born in Tokyo on June 29, 1907.
高島 重孝
Shigetaka Takashima was born in Tokyo on June 29, 1907.
In 1931, he graduated from Keio University.
He worked in Kuryu Rakusen-en Sanatorium, Tohoku Shinseien Sanatorium, Suruga Sanatorium and Nagashima Aiseien Sanatorium. In the same year, he entered Keio University"s department of preventive medicine. In 1933, he worked in Kuryu Rakusen-en Sanatorium.
In 1939, he worked in Tohoku Shinseien Sanatorium.
In 1942, he worked in Musashi Sanatorium for the War Disabled. In 1943, he served as the acting director in Ehime Sanatorium for the War Disabled.
In 1944, he was the acting director in Tokyo Sanatorium for the War Disabled. In December 1944, he was appointed the director of Suruga Sanatorium for the War Disabled.
In December 1945, he became the director of Suruga Sanatorium.
In August 1957, he was appointed director of Nagashima Aiseien Sanatorium following the retirement of Kensuke Mitsuda. In April 1978, he was made honorary director of Nagashima Aiseien Sanatorium. Takashima died on January 23, 1985.
In 1947, he delivered a special lecture on war and leprosy at the Congress of the Japanese Leprosy Association, which was reported in the next year.
He obtained correct data since he had worked for sanatoriums for the war disabled. He reported that the total number of leprosy in-patients who developed during service was 732.
0.13 per 1000 mobilized. If other conditions were included, he estimated that an average of 100 patients developed leprosy among soldiers and sailors per year.
He also pointed out that the number of military patients per localities correlated with the number of patients who lived in these localities, and suggested that the military patients had been infected in childhood.
Another point he stressed was that only 3 officers developed leprosy, while all others were soldiers and sailors. A Guide to Leprosy Medicine In 1970, he compiled a textbook "A guide to leprosy (Rai Igaku no Tebiki)", which was the only one textbook of leprosy at that time. Nagashima Bridge.