Asian Immigrant Workers Benefit From Occupational Therapy

ain is part of the job for many of the more than 30,000 low-income Asian immigrant women working in the San Francisco Bay Area's garment factories.

To help these women, the Asian Immigrant Women Advocates, Inc. (AIWA) is using a two-year, $100,000 grant from TCWF to establish a clinic that will provide occupation-related health services and health education about workplace ergonomics and injuries.

"The low-income Asian women's population is traditionally not well-served by medical services in California," said TCWF Senior Program Officer Ruth Brousseau. "[The women] are often hesitant to seek help because they fear jeopardizing their jobs, and it's difficult for them to overcome language and cultural barriers to seek appropriate treatment."

AIWA, which has been providing literacy services and leadership development for low-income Asian immigrant women for 16 years, is partnering with the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), Occupational Health Program, to open and staff a clinic in Oakland's Chinatown, where almost no health care services are available for these workers.

photo by Keith Silva"We're focusing on musculoskeletal problems common among Chinese women working in the garment industry," said Young Shin, AIWA's executive director. "They experience a high incidence of back and shoulder injuries caused by repetitive motion and the hunched-back position necessitated by the work and aggravated by poor working conditions."

Teams of "peer health promoters" trained by AIWA refer patients to the clinic and conduct workshops to help workers identify and prevent workplace injuries. Because data on musculoskeletal injuries are scarce among low-income Asian women, AIWA and UCSF will also be able to expand knowledge of prevention and treatment of such problems through the clinic.

"We know that repetitive stress and other workplace injuries and illnesses are greatly underreported, undiagnosed and untreated in this population," Shin said.

Reasons are many, including fear of losing jobs, no sick leave or health benefits, costs for medical treatment and lost income, language and cultural barriers, lack of knowledge about available worker protections and concern about their immigrant status. In addition, few health specialists are trained in occupational health, adding to the difficulty of obtaining appropriate care.

"This project will help workers who use the clinic's services and draw attention to the fact that occupational injuries usually are systemic, coming with the type of work they do," TCWF's Brousseau said. "Just treating the problem doesn't cure it. We have an opportunity to educate women to become advocates for their health, which, in the long run, will improve their chances for upward social mobility. Research shows that upward mobility has pronounced positive health outcomes."


Spring 2000

INSIDE:

Cover Story

Eating disorder prevention

School-based health clinic

Pregnancy prevention resource directory

Firearms Injury Surveillance Program

Health services for Asian immigrant workers

Health professionals' views on pesticides

Staff Profile

Application process

Grants awarded this quarter

What's New

Credits

 
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