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Hospitals struggle with growing language barrier - (Speak English or Die)
AP ^ | September 2, 2003 | LAURAN NEERGAARD

Posted on 09/03/2003 5:19:04 AM PDT by Damocles

Posted on Tue, Sep. 02, 2003



Hospitals struggle with growing language barrier
Inaccurate translation leads to medical errors


LAURAN NEERGAARD
Associated Press


WASHINGTON - The nurse ordered an oral antibiotic to clear up the 7-year-old's ear infection. But the mother spoke no English -- and a bystander pulled in to translate told her to pour the drug into the girl's ears.

It was one of dozens of dangerous translation errors Dr. Glenn Flores uncovered when he taped exams of 70 Spanish-speaking children in Boston emergency rooms and clinics.

And that's just examining the nation's most common foreign language -- imagine the difficulty when a hospital encounters its first patient speaking, say a Hmong dialect of the Miao-Yao language of Southeastern Asia.

About 21 million people in the United States speak limited or no English -- 50 percent more than a decade ago -- and health workers are struggling to cope.

Hospitals "are reeling from the major change in the number and diversity of languages they're encountering," says Ellen Pryga of the American Hospital Association. "The reality is ... if someone shows up who needs services and doesn't speak English, you have to figure out how to communicate with them. It doesn't matter if they're the only one you've ever encountered who speaks Swahili."

Unable to hire an interpreter for every language, they're trying creative methods: volunteer translator clubs, telephone interpreters, teaching foreign phrases to doctors, and hiring bilingual nurses, clerks, even janitors who can translate in a pinch

But the question is what works. Special training is probably crucial because general fluency in a language seldom guarantees knowledge of medical terms, says Yolanda Partida of Hablamos Juntos, a program started by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to improve Spanish health communication.

Hablamos Juntos is funding 10 experiments around the country to find innovative solutions, especially in rural areas like central Nebraska.

Six counties where the Hispanic population more than tripled in the 1990s are preparing to test a videoconferencing system that would let emergency rooms and maternity wards share 24-hour access to Spanish-speaking interpreters -- and train additional translators long-distance.

Doctors generally can't turn away sick patients because of language barriers. Civil rights law requires health facilities that accept any federal funding to make provisions for non-English speakers.

Just how many languages different facilities must be able to tackle, and using what methods, the law doesn't make clear.

But studies show many non-English speakers go without an interpreter -- and thus shun health care until they wind up in the emergency room -- or use untrained bystanders.

"The default position of many providers is to rely on family members and friends because that's what's convenient and the provider doesn't have to worry about how to pay for it," says Mara Youdelman of the National Health Law Program. "The end result is there are significant medical errors."

Interpreter services are supposed to be free to patients, but health workers report paying from $7 an hour to $50 an hour for professional interpreters. Medicaid [tax payer] allows states to draw federal matching funds to help cover the costs but only nine -- Idaho, Hawaii, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Montana, New Hampshire, Washington and Utah -- so far do. Pennsylvania and Kansas are preparing to.

"Ultimately this is costing the system more" to skip an interpreter, says Flores, citing research that found access to interpreters increases cheaper preventive care.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Nebraska
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To: FITZ
It takes a motivated adult only about 6 months to learn another language.

You said the magic word: motivated. What motivation is there when everyone translates everything into your original language? Answer: none. I wonder why Hispanic leaders/groups never seem to think that this makes their people look really stupid, especially considering that Spanish is considerable closer to English than Chinese or Russian?

21 posted on 09/03/2003 6:40:02 AM PDT by SpinyNorman
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To: SpinyNorman
" The unspoken fact is that the patient speaking Hmong probably also speaks English better than most Hispanics that have been here a lifetime, coddled by Spanish instructions on everything."

Well, not really true. I used to live near one of the areas where we stuck the Hmong after pulling them out of Vietnam. A majority/significant minority (40-55%) don't seem to speak English.

Of course, these people didn't sign up to come here. They had to move to escape getting killed for helping us in the war, so on some level it's understandable that they'd not assimilate as quickly as other immigrant groups. But in this area many things were translated into their language as well.

At least the kids are English speaking, if not a bit rude.

22 posted on 09/03/2003 6:56:33 AM PDT by bryanbig
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To: Damocles
How about teaching foreign doctors to speak English!
23 posted on 09/03/2003 7:00:04 AM PDT by mtbopfuyn
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To: raybbr
they nod their head I take that as they understood me

What gripes the heck outta me is when they don't understand and can't speak a word of English but let their paychecks be late and it's amazing how much English they know.

24 posted on 09/03/2003 7:04:09 AM PDT by mtbopfuyn
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To: Damocles
Why don't they go over to Canada? The health care is free and everyone speaks English AND FRENCH.
25 posted on 09/03/2003 7:07:51 AM PDT by Alouette (The bombing begins in five minutes.)
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To: Capriole
He was astonished because he didn't know that blonde ladies could rip him a new one in Castillian-accented Spanish

Good for you! My wife is fluent in Spanish and she loves just laying back and letting people think she doesn't understand them, until she launches into them. She has surprised and embarrassed many by doing that and I always get a chuckle.

26 posted on 09/03/2003 7:35:24 AM PDT by VeniVidiVici (There is nothing Democratic about the Democrat party.)
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To: dagnabbit
That's right Karl, dig us an ever-deepening hole.....

[I never noticed but you spell your name with a K just like Marx did]

27 posted on 09/03/2003 7:42:14 AM PDT by citizen (Write-in Tom Tancredo President 2004!)
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To: Damocles
My family moved here, suffered discrimintion as non-English-speaking foreigners, and then learned English and assimilated.

Why in the name of God can't these people get off their butts and do the same thing?
28 posted on 09/03/2003 7:47:41 AM PDT by Steely Glint ("Political language...is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable..." - G. Orwell)
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To: Capriole
"this is a this is a country of opportunity for hard-working people. ..."

Well, yes, but the anti-American Left has been busily trying for decades to turn it into a country of opportunity for NON-working people.

And they are succeeding.
29 posted on 09/03/2003 7:51:18 AM PDT by Steely Glint ("Political language...is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable..." - G. Orwell)
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To: Kozak
Provided free of course. Just like the care mandated in the ER by EMTALA. Doctors are free, nurses are free, translators are free, lights, supplies, equipment of course all come free.

The mandate for hospitals to provide free services could have worked as long as hospitals could charge other customers to make up the difference. It would have been immoral (theft), but it could have worked.

Under Federal, state, and local price controls, it cannot work. It is breaking hospitals all across the country, especially in rural areas and areas affected by illegal immigration.

Of course, our masters do not rely on such institutions for their own needs, so it doesn't matter.

The root of the problem, of course, is the unconscionable EMTALA, which is, unbelieveably, supported by many FReepers and others. EMTALA is looting, plain and simple, and it will eventually bring down the whole system if it is not repealed.

Maybe that's the point.

30 posted on 09/03/2003 7:57:04 AM PDT by Jim Noble
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To: Steely Glint
I can't disagree with you there.
31 posted on 09/03/2003 8:13:59 PM PDT by Capriole (Foi vainquera)
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