Erna Takazawa has the honour of being Samoa’s only optometrist at the grand old age of 28. Jai Breitnauer caught up with her while she was in New Zealand after VOSO sponsored her to attend this year’s Ocular Therapeutics Conference.
Erna Takazawa was born in Japan, but moved back to Samoa with her family when she was just one year old. Island life was all she knew, apart from a brief visit to Auckland as a teen. But a very Samoan experience when she was just 15 years old changed the course of her future.
“My younger sister was having some problems with her sight. My parents took her to the hospital, but they didn’t know what to do with her. There were no qualified optometrists in Samoa,” explains Takazawa. Eventually, an American man living locally who had some basic optometry skills diagnosed her myopia and organised a pair of glasses for her at a cost of 700 Tala (about $390).”
At the time, the minimum wage in Samoa was just 2 Tala an hour and Takazawa realised her family were lucky to be able to afford the glasses.
“I decided then that I wanted to become an optometrist to bring affordable and accessible professional eye care to local people. But I also realised it wouldn’t be easy.”








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