Foreign Care Workers in Japan: A Policy Without a Vision

Society

Japan will lower specific immigration barriers this year to ease a projected shortage of professional care workers for the elderly. A health sociologist draws on extensive research to critique the government’s shortsighted, private-sector-driven approach to the problem, calling for greater efforts to support and export Japan’s advanced system of care work.

The Language Challenge

The establishment of care workers as a new category of legal residence status under Japanese immigration law will doubtless open the door to a significant influx of migrants from around the region. But how many of these migrants will come equipped with the basic skills, appropriate educational background, and temperament needed to provide services at the level we expect of our care workers in Japan? We can hardly expect them to attain those standards in the course of a two-year program unless they are screened in advance for Japanese language proficiency, basic knowledge of medicine, and aptitude for emotional labor.

For example, a level of Japanese proficiency equivalent to at least N3 (under the five-tiered Japanese-Language Proficiency Test) is considered essential to pass the national board examination for care workers. Now being discussed is a requirement for Japanese language ability at a level corresponding to N4 (the ability to understand basic Japanese) for admission into the Technical Intern Training Program. However, no language requirement has been established for international students entering the country with the intent of applying for the kaigo resident status under the legislation passed last fall. This raises the possibility that large numbers of candidates will enter the country with no hope of attaining the minimum level of Japanese language proficiency needed for success in the national board examination.

EPA returnees could help address this screening problem and, in the process, play a key role in the transfer of Japanese care know-how and technology. First, they would need to secure positions as high-level instructors in their home countries’ nursing schools. After that, they could help develop and teach a curriculum geared to Japan’s national board examination, including courses in Japanese language and culture, as well as the basics of geriatric nursing and care. Graduates of such a curriculum would enter Japan’s Technical Intern Training Program in care and/or apply for a visa as international students, who aim to obtain the kaigo resident status in the future, after equipping themselves with the basic level of language skills and medical knowledge needed to succeed.

Of course, not all graduates of those courses would be obliged to migrate to Japan. Some might choose to stay behind and help their own countries prepare for the aged society to come, such as by providing guidance to family caregivers and improving the overall quality of elder care in the communities where they live.

Building the Kaigo Brand

Here in Japan, meanwhile, we should work to build the kaigo “brand” as a synonym for high-quality, standardized care supported by the Japanese system of long-term care insurance. This is the biggest key to attracting talented people to the profession on a continuing basis. We should also develop methods to assist EPA and Technical Intern Training Program returnees in adapting Japan’s systems and practices to their own countries’ conditions, including their epidemiological profiles, healthcare systems, and labor situations. Such a model would be worth exporting to countries around Southeast Asia, especially nations like Singapore and Thailand, where society is aging at a rapid pace. In addition to hastening the dissemination of advanced Japanese know-how and technology in the field, such an initiative would help create new jobs throughout the region.

Care work is one of a number of areas in which Japan has developed outstanding technology and know-how. With this in mind, we need to balance efforts to bring foreign care workers to Japan with policies aimed at nurturing and disseminating our know-how. This means devoting adequate time and care to training foreign workers, while also maintaining the kind of domestic labor environment needed to preserve the image and reality of Japanese care work as decent work. We should also continue to provide technical assistance and services to trainees after they have returned home. The transfer of technical know-how to support an aged society is one important way in which Japan can contribute to the international community in the years ahead.

(Banner photo: Indonesian trainees at an elderly care facility in Itami, Hyōgo Prefecture, on February 10, 2009. © Jiji.)

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