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March 2014. A month earlier I had hand-built a brace for a stroke patient at the small clinic in San Vito, my assignment site. The brace had stayed on my mind, and when an errand came up that needed me in the capital, I wanted to see Costa Rica's National Rehabilitation Center while I was there. A senior fellow volunteer agreed to show me around.

From San Vito to San José was seven-plus hours on a mountain bus. I left early in the morning and got into the capital around noon.

What CENARE is

CENARE is Centro Nacional de Rehabilitación "Dr. Humberto Araya Rojas" — the national rehabilitation center run by Costa Rica's social security system, the CCSS. It sits in the La Uruca district on the outskirts of San José, opened in 1977, and is the hub of public rehabilitation services for the entire country.

Its starting point traces back to a major polio outbreak in 1950s Costa Rica, when more than 50,000 children are recorded to have been affected. The senior doctors of that generation spent the following decades building the country's rehabilitation infrastructure. Dr. Humberto Araya Rojas, the pediatrician whose name the center carries, was at the heart of that work.

The entrance to CENARE, Costa Rica's National Rehabilitation Center
The entrance to CENARE. Red-roofed main building, an ambulance in the parking lot. Patients come from all over the country to this place.

Bienvenidos cenare — Una meta a la vez

Just past the front gate stood a sign: Bienvenidos (Welcome), with the CENARE logo — a blue silhouette reaching for a star — and below it Una meta a la vez, "One goal at a time." Four Spanish words that sum up the essence of rehabilitation. Standing there straight after spending weeks going from hardware store to hardware store to put together one brace, that phrase stuck with me for a long while.

CENARE sign with logo and the tagline Una meta a la vez
The CENARE sign and the tagline Una meta a la vez. The blue silhouette reaching toward stars is the center's emblem.

Contracture-prevention tools made from PVC pipe

The first thing that caught my eye inside was a stretching device made of pieces of PVC pipe — a simple tool for preventing the contractures (joint stiffening) that can follow a stroke. Plain construction, nothing fancy. The kind of thing I could probably build myself in an afternoon.

The senior volunteer guiding me said, quietly: "This one too — apparently a past volunteer taught them how to make it." A bit of know-how left behind by a Japanese staff member here years ago, still in daily use. The work had taken root. Short comment, but it rearranged something in my head: what I was doing day to day in San Vito sat on top of a timeline measured in decades, not months.

Contracture-prevention rehab tool built from PVC pipe
A contracture-prevention device made of PVC pipe. "Apparently a past volunteer taught them how to make it," the senior volunteer said.
Same PVC contracture-prevention device, different angle
The same device from another angle. Cheap material, simple construction — which is exactly why it stays in use year after year.

Inside the orthotics room

Then the orthotics room. Knee braces lined up cleanly on the shelves — sorted by size, sorted by type. "No latest-generation equipment, but for the physical therapy side, they're actually better stocked than what you'd typically see in Japan," the senior volunteer said, half-joking. Even just looking at the shelves, you could tell this was a place that had been put together over decades.

Knee braces on the shelves of CENARE's orthotics room
Knee braces lined up on the shelves of the orthotics room — sorted by size and by type.

The sensory mat I wanted back in San Vito

In the training room there was a rubber mat covered in small round bumps — a sensory mat, used to deliver tactile stimulation through the soles of the feet. Useful for post-stroke sensory re-education, also for foot care in patients with diabetic neuropathy. In a Japanese rehab room it would be unremarkable, but San Vito had nothing like it — really, the San Vito clinic had no dedicated training equipment at all. Just my hands, the patient's body, and the walker borrowed from the local nursing home on a good day.

"Sensory mat — want one for San Vito." I scribbled it down right there in my notebook. The rehab equipment you actually need is rarely that long a list. But the gap between a place that has it and a place that doesn't is wider than you'd think.

Rubber rehab mat with raised round bumps
The sensory mat. San Vito didn't have one. The little items I kept wishing for were sitting in plain view at CENARE.
Small rehab equipment in the CENARE training room
Other small equipment in the same training room. The unflashy items often matter most on the floor.

A lift into the pool

Further inside, a pool for hydrotherapy. Mounted at the poolside was a lift designed to lower a seated patient — someone who can't get into the water on their own — directly into the water. Some facilities in Japan have these, but I hadn't seen one in my own clinical experience. Finding one in a public Costa Rican facility was, frankly, unexpected.

A pool transfer lift at CENARE's hydrotherapy pool
This is how you get into the pool, the senior volunteer said. The patient stays seated and the lift lowers them into the water.

Big equipment I saw running for the first time

The last room I was taken into had a large piece of equipment I'd never seen in person. A device that supports the whole body in standing while assisting movement; I knew the concept existed and that some facilities in Japan had it, but I had never seen one in actual operation within my own clinical experience up to that point. "Want to try this someday," I wrote in my notes. Walking into a place described as "no latest equipment" and meeting a machine you've never seen running — that's a fun kind of surprise.

Large rehabilitation device at CENARE
The big one. Japan would have the same type of device in some facilities too, but at the time I'd never seen one running in the clinics I'd worked in.

The view that ended up shaping later research

The tour wrapped up late in the afternoon. I thanked the senior volunteer and took the evening bus back to San Vito. Rocking through mountain roads on the way home, the thing rolling around in my head wasn't the equipment itself — it was something quieter.

Within one and the same country, the things missing from the San Vito clinic were sitting matter-of-factly on the shelves at CENARE. Between an assignment site where I had to build a brace by hand and a national center where braces are made as a profession, there was more than a seven-hour bus ride of physical distance — there was the length of the institutional path a patient has to walk to get from one to the other. You have to see a place that has before you really notice what isn't there. That's what the visit meant to me, looking back.

Background (general information)

This section is editorial context compiled from public sources. For the latest system details, please check the official channels below.

CENARE (Costa Rica's National Rehabilitation Center)

Costa Rica's rehabilitation and orthotics supply

Further reading

Note: This article is a personal record of a single 2014 visit. CENARE's current facilities, equipment, and procedures may differ from what is described here. Please consult CCSS and CENARE's official information for the latest details.

Related spots

1
CENARE (Costa Rica's National Rehabilitation Center)
La Uruca, San José, Costa Rica / Run by CCSS, opened in 1977; carries the name of Dr. Humberto Araya Rojas
2
San Vito (San Vito de Coto Brus)
Coto Brus, Puntarenas / My assignment site, a mountain town. Seven-plus hours by bus from CENARE