articleNew England Journal of MedicineJul 19, 2006Closed access

Language Barriers to Health Care in the United States

Children's Hospital of Wisconsin

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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 . .…

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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Interpreter
  • Medicine
  • Language barrier
  • Health care
  • Emergency department
  • Limited English proficiency
  • Family medicine
  • Humanities
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Quality Education
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