[Father's Day Gift] One in Three Willing to Gift 'Low-Impact Back Pain Treatment'! A New Form of 'Filial Piety' to Support Parental Health
NQ Score
84/100
N1 Content Completeness
90
Key facts
- [Father's Day Gift] One in Three Willing to Gift 'Low-Impact Back Pain Treatment'! A New Form of 'Filial Piety' to Support Parental Health
- A survey by Nonaka Back Pain Clinic found that nearly half of fathers over 60 suffer from back pain, with families expressing significant concern over daily life impacts and future caregiving burdens. About 90% view health support as a key form of filial piety, highlighting demand for less invasive treatments.
- Source: PR TIMES
- Date: Mon Jun 08 2026 12:00:01 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)
Direct answer
A survey by Nonaka Back Pain Clinic found that nearly half of fathers over 60 suffer from back pain, with families expressing significant concern over daily life impacts and future caregiving burdens. About 90% view health support as a key form of filial piety, highlighting demand for less invasive treatments.
- Citation
- [Father's Day Gift] One in Three Willing to Gift 'Low-Impact Back Pain Treatment'! A New Form of 'Filial Piety' to Support Parental Health (Mon Jun 08 2026 12:00:01 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)), PR TIMES
- Source
- PR TIMES
- Date
- Mon Jun 08 2026 12:00:01 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)
AI Summary (NQ-processed)
A survey by Nonaka Back Pain Clinic found that nearly half of fathers over 60 suffer from back pain, with families expressing significant concern over daily life impacts and future caregiving burdens. About 90% view health support as a key form of filial piety, highlighting demand for less invasive treatments.
AI Analysis
Frequently Asked Questions
- Q: What are the family's main concerns regarding the father's back pain?
- A: According to the survey, the most common concern is the 'impact on daily activities such as walking and climbing stairs' (43.5%), followed by 'increased future caregiving burden' (37.9%), and 'progression or worsening of pain' (36.6%).
- Q: In what situations do you notice the physical decline of your parents?
- A: The most common situation is when 'walking has become slower' (34.2%), followed by 'taking more time to stand up or sit down' (28.5%), and 'having difficulty with steps or stairs' (27.9%).
- Q: What percentage of people consider supporting parents' healthy and independent living as important filial piety?
- A: Approximately 90% (very important 35.5%, somewhat important 53.2%) believe that supporting parents to live a healthy and independent life is an important form of filial piety.
- Q: What was the target group and number of participants in this survey?
- A: The survey was conducted online from April 28 to 29, 2026, targeting 1,005 men and women aged 20-50 who have fathers aged 60 or older.
- Q: What was the background for the implementation of this survey by Nomnakai Clinic?
- A: The survey was conducted to understand the concerns and support intentions of the younger generation, as many elderly people with back pain are at risk of becoming bedridden or requiring care, and often give up on finding a fundamental cure.