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Japan doctor who practiced until months before his death dies at 105


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Japan doctor who practiced until months before his death dies at 105

By Elaine Lies

 

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Japanese Empress Michiko (R) talks with physician Shigeaki Hinohara prior to a concert performed by South Korean tenor Bae Jae-chul in Tokyo, Japan, July 31, 2016. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

 

TOKYO (Reuters) - A centenarian Japanese doctor who saw patients until just months before his death and helped set up the medical systems that have made Japan one of the world's longest-lived nations died on Tuesday at the age of 105.

 

Born in 1911, a year before the Titanic sank, Shigeaki Hinohara was for decades the director and public face of St. Luke's International Hospital in Tokyo, so well known as an "international" hospital that it treated luminaries such as Paul McCartney when he fell ill during a 2014 Japanese tour.

 

He was working at St Luke's as early as 1945, when he treated victims of the World War Two Tokyo firebombing that left vast swathes of the city in ruins.

 

"From the start of this year his health wasn't so good, but until then he'd drop into the hospital every so often to conduct exams and talk with patients," a hospital spokeswoman said.

 

An early advocate of healthier living to stave off the ills of ageing, Hinohara in 1954 introduced Japan's so-called "human dry-dock" system of comprehensive annual physical exams, part of the preventive medical system said to contribute to Japan's longevity.

 

The author of 75 books, including a bestseller on living well penned at 101, Hinohara was also a frequent guest on Japanese television, where he unveiled a lifestyle that included orange juice with olive oil for breakfast and said that energy comes from feeling good, not fixed rules about living.

 

"We all remember how as children, when we were having fun, we often forgot to eat or sleep," he was quoted as saying.

 

"I believe we can keep that attitude as adults - it's best not to tire the body with too many rules such as lunchtime and bedtime."

 

(Reporting by Elaine Lies; Editing by Michael Perry)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2017-07-18
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Apparently his skill sets were advising the Japanese troops in the 1930's in Mancunia how to bayonet to death unborn babies but still letting the mother endure a painfull death.  Just another evil person who has met his maker.

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6 hours ago, esprit said:

Apparently his skill sets were advising the Japanese troops in the 1930's in Mancunia how to bayonet to death unborn babies but still letting the mother endure a painfull death.  Just another evil person who has met his maker.

you know that for a fact ?

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Amazing but I wonder how active he actually was within his profession during his later years and how "updated" he was. Even within a narrow specialism the sheer volume of research etc challenges much younger people in their attempts to remain current. . 

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