Some Filipino health workers turn backs on opportunities in Japan

A number Filipino nurses and caregivers who seized the opportunity to undergo training in Japan to qualify for work there have ended up returning to the Philippines, including some who passed the tough licensure exam. “The journey to becoming a nurse in Japan was indeed a mission impossible….We were very tired physically, mentally and emotionally while studying to pass the board exam and working at the same time. All of us were pushed to study even on our rest day,” a Filipino nurse who quit only a year after his deployment in 2011 told Kyodo News recently. The 33-year-old nurse, who requested anonymity so he could freely express his views, is among more than 1,200 Filipino nurses and caregivers who were accepted by Japan starting in 2009 under the Japan-Philippines Economic Partnership Agreement. Under the program, nurses and caregivers from the Philippines first learn the Japanese language and culture, undergo...

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A number Filipino nurses and caregivers who seized the opportunity to undergo training in Japan to qualify for work there have ended up returning to the Philippines, including some who passed the tough licensure exam.

“The journey to becoming a nurse in Japan was indeed a mission impossible….We were very tired physically, mentally and emotionally while studying to pass the board exam and working at the same time. All of us were pushed to study even on our rest day,” a Filipino nurse who quit only a year after his deployment in 2011 told Kyodo News recently.

&nbspSome Filipino health workers turn backs on opportunities in Japan

The 33-year-old nurse, who requested anonymity so he could freely express his views, is among more than 1,200 Filipino nurses and caregivers who were accepted by Japan starting in 2009 under the Japan-Philippines Economic Partnership Agreement.

Under the program, nurses and caregivers from the Philippines first learn the Japanese language and culture, undergo training in Japanese health facilities, and then take the Japanese licensure exam in their respective profession.

Candidates who pass the exam are granted a working visa, thereby helping Japan address its lack of health workers amid a growing elderly population.

Source: Kyodo
Image: Japan Times
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