Faculty of Medical Management and Information Scie

Kazumi Takesako

  (竹迫 和美)

Profile Information

Affiliation
School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medical Management and Information Science, Fujita Health University
Degree
博士(人間科学)(大阪大学)

J-GLOBAL ID
201601021013054160
researchmap Member ID
7000015673

Papers

 5
  • takesako kazumi
    Osaka Univerisy (Ph.D. Dissertation), Mar, 2014  Peer-reviewed
  • Takesako Kazumi, Nakamura Yasuhide
    Kokusai Hoken Iryo, 28(4) 279-286, 2013  Peer-reviewed
    <B>Objectives</B><BR>To analyze the professionalization process of medical interpreting in the United States. The findings are expected to provide suggestions for Japan, a nation primed to educate its future professional medical interpreters.<BR><B>Method</B><BR>Initial members of the world's oldest medical interpreters association were interviewed. The transcripts were analyzed through thematic analysis.<BR><B>Results</B><BR>A group of staff interpreters met to share stories of difficult cases and dilemmas at work in the 1980s, later forming a professional organization in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1986. Later, they began to discuss common issues and developed some standards to clarify role definitions. They advocated for the profession with an aim to increase employment by collaborating with stakeholders to enact the first state law of medical interpreting. Out of eight participants, six worked as a professional interpreter and trainer simultaneously, thus educating newcomers to the profession. Conferences enabled professional medical interpreters and stakeholders to expand their network for local or joint initiatives to further develop the profession. The state government provided grants to medical interpreting education projects and issued guidance to hospitals for best practices.<BR><B>Conclusion</B><BR>To establish medical interpreting as a profession, organizational and advocacy activities were vital. Pioneering medical interpreters played an important role in the process of developing the profession by forming a professional organization, creating standards, approaching stakeholders, and becoming professional trainers to educate newcomers to be skillful enough. This network expanded through conferences enabling multiple stakeholders to take initiatives and accelerate the process. The participants pointed out the lack of training courses, difficulty in building relationships with physicians, and self-stress control. A survey conducted in Japan revealed that medical interpreters pointed out a lack of training courses, a lack of understanding by physicians and patients, and a lack of mental support. This study provides important lessons for burgeoning interpreters in Japan, with these commonalities in mind.
  • Kiyomi Takizawa, Kazumi Takesako, Masayuki Kawamura, Tetsuo Sakamaki
    MEDINFO 2013: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 14TH WORLD CONGRESS ON MEDICAL AND HEALTH INFORMATICS, PTS 1 AND 2, 192 1027-1027, 2013  Peer-reviewed
    Today, the number of foreign residents in Japan is increasingdue to globalization. However, Japan is behind other advanced countries in accepting oversea patients. Japan has to improve medical institutions' readiness to accept foreign patients, and nurture medical interpreters. To address these issues, we developed a language support application for smart phones. Anyone can download it freely.
  • Takesako Kazumi, Takizawa Kiyomi, Sakamaki Tetsuo
    Japanese journal of telemedicine and telecare, 6(1) 2-5, Apr, 2010  Peer-reviewed
  • 瀧澤 清美, 竹迫 和美, 岩澤 由子
    Japanese journal of telemedicine and telecare, 5(1) 16-19, Apr, 2009  Peer-reviewed

Misc.

 6

Presentations

 7