Ginza Koyama daily journal 2022.10.16 Market Society and Welfare

Ginza Koyama daily journal 2022.10.16 Market Society and Welfare

A story from 30 years ago.

I went to a lecture held by the Nursing Home Association.

The lecturer was the director of a social welfare corporation for elderly women and the director of a nursing home.

In any case , they put on air and boasted.

Private nursing homes owned by corporations will be able to choose their customers.

Just be rich.

Compared to that, social welfare corporations can’t choose.

It was as if to say that it was a noble, honorable and difficult task.

Even when it was time to ask questions, the company president, who was flustered, did not raise his hand.

The youngest, fearless, first-time participant raised his hand.

Unlike nursing homes, the world of corporations is competitive.

Social welfare is easy because the government guarantees it.

When they where told that, they made a bitter face and didn’t reply.

In fact, the corporation was dissolved a few months later.

In order to compensate for the lack of staff, trainees from foreign countries were included in the staff number.

Um, the arrogant attitude is famous in the industry, and it seems that they could not gather staff.

It got canceled because they did not comply with usage fee refund order.

Management could not return it.

That’s why they was putting on air until the end.

Education, medical care, and welfare are all trying to be made possible by the independence of the private sector.

The advent of an era in which users can freely choose.

Hospitals, nursing homes, and nursery schools will become a fiercely competitive society.

If you don’t become a facility of choice, you can’t survive financially.

Bankruptcy or merger/restructuring?

Employees will regret their lives if they do not choose a corporation to work for and a manager.

Of course, managers also choose their employees.

Thank you for your hard work. Thank you.

Pulse oximeter 97/98/98

Blood sugar 153 Body temperature 36.1 degrees

Hate arrogance and irreverence

CEO Yasunari Koyama