Indonesian Nurses in Japan Criticize Tough Exams
August 03, 2010
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389224Their country... their rule.. enuf said..
Three years is enough time - there are 1945 characters that represent almost 100% of all written material, plus a few hundred more for medical terms. The average Japanese knows 2500 kanji. Sounds a lot, but foreign students living in Japan can pick up the 1945 kanji in around six months to a year. And I would certainly expect someone working day in day out in the medical field to pick up the terms relatively quickly.
Given that almost all Japanese speak no other language, how can someone be an effective nurse without being competent in the language?
Any foreign citizens with no knowledge or familiarity with the Japanese Characters on their entry examination will certainly flunk out. How can anyone be expected to learn it in such a short period...Duh.
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Tokyo. Japan allows hundreds of Southeast Asian nurses to work on short-term contracts, but the health-care workers say the exams they must pass for the right to stay longer are so tough that almost all flunk them.
Nurses and care-givers from Indonesia and the Philippines are now asking their host country to relax the requirements that force them to quickly learn thousands of Japanese characters and medical terms on top of their work duties.
“It’s really a challenge for us to pass the exam, with only one chance, after working full-time for three years,” Indonesian nurse Wahyudin, 28, said in Japanese at a Tokyo press conference on Tuesday.
“I think the current exam is more a test of the Japanese language, rather than a test of the qualifications of the caregiver,” said Wahyudin, who said he was speaking for scores of fellow foreign nurses in Japan.
In recent years, hundreds of nurses from Indonesia and the Philippines have been allowed to enter rapidly greying Japan, with its usually strict immigration controls, to fill a labour shortage of health care workers.
Those who hope to stay longer than three years in the case of nurses, and four years in the case of caregivers, need to pass the exams — a feat achieved by only three out of 254 applicants who sat the test this year.
In a mock exam held last month, “unfortunately not a single Indonesian caregiver passed,” Wahyudin told the news conference.
He was joined and supported at the press conference by conservative opposition upper house lawmaker Hirohiko Nakamura, a former chairman of the Japanese Council of Senior Citizens Welfare Service.
“I’d like to pass the exam and become a caregiver in Japan,” Wahyudin said.
“Please help us Indonesian caregiver candidates by improving the system.”
A health ministry survey in February showed that more than 90 percent of elderly and disabled people said they were satisfied with the services Indonesian caregiver candidates gave them in nursing-care facilities.
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