http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2627&Itemid=201


Japan's Gingerly Caregiver Plan 

Written by Todd Crowell    
Friday, 06 August 2010 

Plan to Bring Asian Caregivers into Japan Falters 


With the world's fastest-aging population, Japan has a growing need for nurses 
and other caregivers to staff its elderly-care facilities. Asian nations have 
many well-trained nurses and other caregivers who need jobs. The solution: 
import more nurses and care workers from Southeast Asia to fill gaping holes in 
the health care system.

A match made in heaven, one might think. Over the past two years Japan has 
attracted about 1,000 caregivers from the Philippines and Indonesia under 
separate Economic Partnership Agreements (EPA) with the two countries. They 
were to spend three or four years working in Japan, then pass a stiff 
qualifying exam to stay.

The first exam results this summer were extremely embarrassing both to Japan 
and to the countries supplying the health workers. Of the approximately 1,000 
Filipinos and Indonesians who took the exam, exactly three passed the test, a 
pass ratio of a little more than one percent! Those who failed had to go back 
to their home countries.

Japan has always been torn over the question of importing more migrant workers 
into their country. On the one hand it feels a certain duty to extend a helping 
hand to Asian countries, and it certainly has a growing need to find more 
workers willing to perform jobs that Japanese called the "three Ks" - kitsui 
(difficult), kitani (dirty) and kiken (dangerous). Care giving, and to a lesser 
extent nursing, fits into the kitani category, since it involves feeding, 
bathing changing the diapers of elderly Japanese. 

On the other hand, the Japanese genuinely don't like immigrants.

The irony is that the caregiver program was designed in part to counter the bad 
publicity and ill-will Japan has earned for an earlier program designed to 
attract Asian migrants under the 1990s Japan International Training and 
Cooperation Organization. 

Nearly 200,000 Asians have come into Japan, many of them Chinese, ostensibly to 
learn technical skills, but the program has been criticized as simply a way for 
Japanese factories to exploit and abuse cheap labor. This dark side of the of 
Japan's labor was highlighted recently in a New York Times article.

The nursing and caregiver program was meant to be different. From the very 
beginning it was agreed by the three countries involved that the Asian 
caregivers would be paid equally and treated equally with Japanese 
counterparts. They apparently didn't take into consideration the difficulty 
that the foreigners would have comprehending the test.

The qualifying exam in Japan is in two parts, a practical test and a written 
exam which is given in Japanese, requiring among other things that the 
candidates read and understand Kanji, or Japanese characters, something that 
takes Japanese years from kindergarten through high school to master. (Neither 
the Philippines nor Indonesia uses a Chinese script).

It is, of course, desirable that the foreign caregivers be able to converse 
with their elderly clients and to have enough basic literacy to read notices 
and keep medical logs. There is no reason to believe that a large percentage of 
the candidates could obtain these basic language skills. Indonesian caregiver 
Wahyudin spoke to a recent gathering of foreign journalists in fluent Japanese.

Indeed, the National Nurses Examination is so difficult that on only about 50 
percent of Japanese nursing candidates who take it pass. Hirohiko Nakamura, a 
member of the House of Councillors, the upper house of Japan's bicameral 
parliament, said the test is full of "trick" questions designed to trip up the 
candidates.

"Not even Taro Aso could pass it," he joked, referring to the former premier 
who often stumbled over Kanji. More seriously he said that reading the exam 
questions gave him a sense of meanness and a feeling of disgust.

Wahyadin said a few simple changes would make the exams fairer for foreigners 
and help salvage the program. He asked that the examiners to rewrite the test 
questions using more simplified language. As it is, the test includes technical 
Kanji that even ordinary Japanese would find difficult to read. He added that 
candidates should be allowed to take the test two or three times before being 
sent home.

Japan's professional associations are well known to be tenacious defenders of 
their interests and often closely allied with government politicians, and the 
nurses are no different. The Japan Nurses Association (JNA) vigorously opposed 
the foreign nursing program from the very beginning. It even tried to limit it 
to a handful of 10-20 nurses.

"There is a feeling [among some] that there is no way that we can have foreign 
hands touching the bodies of Japanese," said Nakamura. "Without foreign 
pressure there is no way this would have come about in the first place," he 
said. Even now some senior civil servants in the Ministry of Health continue to 
oppose the scheme.

It was the JNA which lobbied the government for a number of strict conditions 
meant to hobble the program, of which, of course most notable was the 
requirement that the caregivers had to pass the national examination within 
three years. The test is so difficult for foreigners that it constitutes a de 
facto ban on the importation of nurses from Southeast Asian countries, critics 
maintain.

The Asian caregiver must also pass a qualifying examination in his or her own 
country before even being allowed to come to Japan. But other countries, such 
as the United States, recognize these qualifications and require nothing more. 
It's only a matter of time before Japan moves to mutual recognition as 
professionals, Nakamura said.

The question of importing more Asian migrant workers tends to cut across party 
lines. Some politicians are for opening up Japan, some are against. Nakamura, a 
vocal proponent of an open door, is a member of the usually more conservative 
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP). There is no mystery where he stands: "If we 
don't open doors to Asia we could see the collapse of the country," he said.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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