Bangkok Post

DOCTOR DREAMS OF TORCH RELAY, FRETS ABOUT PATIENTS

- By Ju-min Park in Tsuruga, Japan

It was Manabu Yoneshima’s dream to cap his medical career by running in the Tokyo Olympics torch relay, a festive occasion he had been training for during nights and weekends.

Instead, Yoneshima has postponed his retirement and his lifelong goal to run the torch relay has been replaced by feelings of guilt as he and his colleagues battle the resurgent coronaviru­s.

“Is it really right that I, as someone managing the hospital fighting the coronaviru­s, run as a torchbeare­r and get a nice memory out of it, when everyone else is struggling and putting up with the pandemic?” asked Yoneshima, who manages the Municipal Tsuruga Hospital, 330 kilometres west of Tokyo.

“Medical workers are still going through tough times and ordinary people are not dining out and restrictin­g their activities,” the 65-year-old physician told Reuters.

With limited staff and equipment, his hospital, the only general hospital in the rural town of Tsuruga with a population of 66,000, is still grappling with the pandemic.

It has so far treated dozens of Covid19 cases, fewer than in other parts of the country, but with a shortage of beds and a flood of elderly patients, his staff are in a constant state of anxiety.

Yoneshima said staffing problems would only get worse once the pace of vaccinatio­ns picks up, diverting staff from their usual roles.

Although Tokyo and nine other prefecture­s are under a state of emergency through March 7, the Olympic torch relay is set to begin on March 25, but will include anti-virus measures like smaller celebratio­ns and social distancing. Some 10,000 runners are expected to take part.

Despite his doubts, Yoneshima is still planning to run.

Most days, he spends hours making his rounds at the hospital and presiding over coronaviru­s meetings. In the evenings when he has time, he changes into a tracksuit and slips into an empty room to use a treadmill. On weekends, he tries to run seven kilometers.

Yoneshima was elated when he was picked to run in the relay. Now, he feels torn.

He worries that his participat­ion may prompt questions about why he’s not helping his colleagues at the hospital instead.

Most Japanese are now opposed to holding the Olympics this summer, polls show, concerned that an influx of foreign athletes could further spread the virus.

Some of Yoneshima’s staff are also sceptical about the Games, but remain supportive of him.

“I honestly don’t think we can have the Olympics,” said Emi Tanaka, a nurse at the hospital. To reduce infection risks, nurses who treat coronaviru­s patients have had to stay in hotels, separated from their families.

However, Tanaka said she wanted Yoneshima to run to encourage the hospital with his positive spirit.

“I hope it will be one step forward that can link us together,” she said.

Preparatio­ns have also been marred by the recent firestorm over sexist comments by the president of the Tokyo organising committee, Yoshiro Mori, who stepped down on Feb 19.

Hundreds of volunteers dropped out in protest after his remarks, while a celebrity torchbeare­r also publicly quit after Mori declared organisers were determined to hold the Olympics “regardless of how the coronaviru­s (situation) looks”.

Officials worried about the fallout emailed torch runners, apologisin­g for Mori’s comments and reiteratin­g that the relay would go ahead as planned, according to an official email seen by Reuters.

While the controvers­y may drag on, Yoneshima still plans to take part.

“If we have the Olympics, I want to run,” he said.

“People may think differentl­y. But I think my torch relay can give hope to medical workers and allow us to run toward a hopeful future.”

“If we have the Olympics, I want to run”

DR MANABU YONESHIMA

 ??  ?? Dr Manabu Yoneshima, manager of Municipal Tsuruga Hospital and a Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games torch relay runner, works out in a rehabilita­tion room at the hospital.
Dr Manabu Yoneshima, manager of Municipal Tsuruga Hospital and a Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games torch relay runner, works out in a rehabilita­tion room at the hospital.
 ??  ?? LEFT
Dr Yoneshima walks through the hospital he runs in Tsuruga, which faces a shortage of beds and a lot of elderly patients.
LEFT Dr Yoneshima walks through the hospital he runs in Tsuruga, which faces a shortage of beds and a lot of elderly patients.
 ??  ?? BELOW
Dr Yoneshima attends a briefing on the latest coronaviru­s disease developmen­ts at his hospital in Tsuruga.
BELOW Dr Yoneshima attends a briefing on the latest coronaviru­s disease developmen­ts at his hospital in Tsuruga.

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