Viet Nam News
Gia Loc
CAN THO – Within a month of treatment, the pain that Nguyen Tuyet Hanh had suffered after a bad fall began to diminish greatly, thanks to treatment from a volunteer physical therapist from Japan.
With skillful and gentle movements, Wakamiya Akiko, 29, of Japan had helped improve the strength and mobility of the 61-year-old’s injured shoulder.
Hanh, who is from the Mekong Delta city of Can Tho, said that she had decided to visit Can Tho General Hospital after the pain began to get worse two months after the fall.
A doctor at the hospital prescribed medicine and asked her to see a physical therapist daily until the pain disappeared.
Akiko, who has been working at the hospital’s physical therapy and rehabilitation department since May last year, conducted an initial evaluation of Hanh, asking about the nature of her pain. She then chose an appropriate therapeutic modality.
Akiko is working with the Japan International Cooperation Agency’s programme called Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteers (JOCV), which has provided technical assistance in developing countries since 1965.
Whenever Akiko meets Hanh, she is friendly, and during therapy, she always checks to see if Hanh is in pain.
“She was really enthusiastic treating my shoulder injury. She also told me about physical exercises that I can do at home,” Hanh said.
Ha Thi Minh Chau, a physical therapist at the department, said: “Akiko has a lot of experience in evaluating patients’ pains and injuries and choosing the right therapeutic modality.”
Patients with a spinal cord injury, for example, are advised to pick up objects on a table to improve the strength of their arms and hands after they begin to walk, Chau said.
Although these exercises had been taught at university, Chau said the therapists “had not paid attention” to them until Akiko began working there.
“We started to change our mindset and pay more attention to such exercises,” she added.
Based on Akiko’s experience, Chau has learned that patients should try to become independent and do exercises so they can better integrate into society.
Akiko, who worked for six years at St Marianna University Hospital in Japan, said that patients who have ligament injuries should begin exercising before and after surgery.
“This was new for us” as exercise was recommended after surgery only, Chau said.
Ngo Thi Lanh, head of the team of physical therapists in the department, said: “Akiko is very studious and works with her heart.”
She is friendly with colleagues and has adapted well to working and living condition in Viet Nam, Lanh added.
Asked why she chose Viet Nam, Akiko said that she liked the country and wanted to help improve the quality of healthcare.
“I want patients to receive better care and recover more quickly,” Akiko said.
While physical therapy is important for patients who have had a stroke or surgery, it also helps prevent complications in patients who have other conditions.
“Although the climate here is hot, which is uncomfortable for me, I still like working at a Vietnamese hospital. I feel happy working here,” Akiko said.
At the hospital, Vietnamese colleagues help Akiko with working and living issues, while Lanh assists her with Vietnamese, which she studied prior to coming to work, so she can communicate more easily with patients.
JOCV provides volunteers with technical skills an opportunity to experience the joy of discovery and creation through technical cooperation, according to the organisation.
Cooperation is provided in agriculture, forestry and fishery, processing, maintenance and operation, civil engineering, public health care, education, culture and sport.
The programme’s volunteers, aged 20 to 39, spend two years involved in cooperation activities and living and working with people in the community.
Since 1995, JOCV has placed more than 500 Japanese volunteers in provinces and cities throughout the country. — VNS