Asahi: Increased demand, lack of cash pinch interpreter services
Like many foreign residents, Wang Mei-chen can speak some Japanese, but not proficiently when it comes to discussing medical issues. So having an interpreter on hand when she visits a hospital with her newborn child is a boon. But groups that provide interpreters to hospitals to help foreign patients are having trouble making ends meet as demand outpaces funding. Wang...was assisted by medical interpreter Masayo Takii...Takii was dispatched by the Suita Inter-people Friendship Association, an affiliate of the Suita municipal government...Currently, 14 people are registered as qualified medical interpreters, specializing in Chinese, English, Korean or Spanish...An interpreter receives 3,000 yen for each visit. The association and the hospital pay 2,000 yen and 1,000 yen, respectively. Association officials say demand has outstripped expectations. In the current fiscal year, interpreters have been dispatched 27 times a month on average, up sharply from 12 times in fiscal 2007. Still, the project's budget can cover only 200 assignments during the current fiscal year...But interpretation services commonly face funding difficulties, according to people working with these projects...The Kyoto city government spends 5 million yen a year on fees for interpreters and other costs under a system run with other organizations. Since the current fiscal year, hospitals have been required to pay 10 percent of the fees and transportation expenses. At the same time, the fees have been raised to 1,000 yen per hour, up from 888 yen, to enlist qualified interpreters....Makiko Mizuno, a professor at Kinjo Gakuin University and author of books on interpretation, said the central government and companies that employ foreigners must play their part because interpretation services are essential for foreigners living in Japan. "A growing number of people have become capable medical interpreters, but they will move to other fields if their pay remains low," said Mizuno, who is helping the Suita city government with its system...more...