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Careers To Go A
Career In Health Education Lui, who lives in Switzerland, explains how she turned her nursing experience into a portable career and describes the success stories of four other accompanying partners. Maybe I was prepared for it because I had worked in the medical field in various countries across the globe? Through my expatriate experience I have been able to find out first hand about a range of different approaches to health issues. With the benefit of objectivity I was able to broaden my horizons and understand the difficulties of maintaining a healthy life when living away from home. Preventive medicine had always been an important issue for me. In fact before I left my native Germany I began offering First Aid introductory classes to kindergarten children. So when moving to Switzerland as a trailing spouse I did not need to look far: arriving into an international community with our own children, it was a small step from the idea to the actual deed and I soon offered classes in First Aid to children and adults. There is always a high demand for information in the health field particularly relating to children. Parents and teaching staff require a sound knowledge of accident prevention and First Aid, for example. So, within two years, I was not only introducing teenagers to basic First Aid techniques and offering classes to adults, but also had the opportunity to talk to the teaching staff of several international schools about important First Aid procedures that could be used in schools and their surroundings. I have found that it is typical for a career in the health field to begin on a small scale like this, and is often started almost accidentally, when friends start asking for advice and support. In our home countries we know where to turn if we have a health problem, but when we are living in a country where we have limited knowledge of the local language, we no longer have a family doctor to turn to for important things such as regular check ups. Our knowledge of up-to-date health-related information can be limited. Of all the careers relating to health, education is probably the most accessible. Thanks to the Internet, gathering information appears to be much simpler and faster but is still a poor substitute for personal information, given face to face from a professional. People also need help with knowing how to access local health care and what the options may be. As a professional, it is fairly simple to get a career started as an advice service. Before long your reputation will spread thanks to word of mouth and referrals. Give
presentations Write
about it If you publish in school newsletters, an international women's club magazine or a local free magazine, you may not get paid for your work but you will have the reward of helping many others with the knowledge you are sharing. Instead of payment for your articles you could ask for some publicity for your forthcoming courses. What
to teach You could consider developing and offering a correspondence course in some subjects too. However, you will need to accept, that unless you can manage to acquire certification for your courses from a reputed body or college, you will not be able to offer recognised qualifications. Take a look at www.odlqc.org.uk for further information. Challenges Be
inspired by: Two years ago she established a private practice in the Frankfurt area of Germany . The emphasis of her practice is working with children from the international community between the ages of two and seven on a variety of speech and language concerns. She has also developed a class in English as a Second Language. Ruth has never experienced any prejudice against herself because she is American. On the contrary, Americans and other English speaking families have been delighted to find the services of an American trained and certified speech pathologist when they arrive in Frankfurt. Additionally she certified in Feng Shui five years ago through the Feng Shui Institute of America and now does Feng Shui consulting as well as teaching classes in the subject. Since her husband is a career school administrator with DoDEA she was lucky never to have had to apply for a work permit. Ros
Piper Mary
B Uhlenhopp Nevertheless, Mary feels that she has not yet successfully found a position functioning at a Master's prepared level as a nurse in central Europe in a clinical setting. The status of nurses, albeit improving is markedly different in Germany and Switzerland than in the US. Educational programs for oncology nurses are improving and focusing more on speciality areas, but do not yet allow nurses to function at the level to which master's prepared nurses in the US are accustomed . If her German language skills were improved she trusts that many teaching opportunities would be available to her. She recommends for women and especially nurses to network with local and international organisations in their profession and to contact key or important people in the area of their relocation to learn how to penetrate the job market. It is important to recognise that people may not always be supportive of the new arrival in the community but no-one should allow themselves to be intimidated by this.
'Starting
anew every time you move is difficult, especially when you work with alternative
healthcare and futuristic methods like Infra Sounds,' says Shabnam. She
also feels that it can be more difficult still, when, like her you are
a member of a minority colour or are unusual in any other way. She feels
that it never works if you try to become more like the locals than the
locals themselves. But instead advises that you remain proud of your origins
while respecting local traditions. You can contact Lui on:LuiHolzleg@aol.com |
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