Language Barriers to Health Care in the United States
Children's Hospital of Wisconsin
Abstract
Interview with Glenn Flores on the effect of language barriers in health care and the need for medical interpreter services. (07:48)Download A 12-year-old Latino boy arrived at a Boston emergency department with dizziness and a headache. The patient, whom I'll call Raul, had limited proficiency in English; his mother spoke no English, and the attending physician spoke little Spanish. No medical interpreter was available, so Raul acted as his own interpreter. His mother described his symptoms:"La semana pasada a el le dio mucho mareo y no tenía fiebre ni nada, y la familia por parte de papá todos padecen de diabetes." (Last week, he had a lot of dizziness, and he didn't have fever or anything, and his dad's . .…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 45.04
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 5
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Interpreter
- Medicine
- Language barrier
- Health care
- Emergency department
- Limited English proficiency
- Family medicine
- Humanities
- Quality Education