language access in health care
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Language Access in Health Care. Right Thing To Do. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Language Access in Health Care
Right Thing To Do
• Contra Costa Health Services is committed to cultural and linguistic competence in the provision of medical care, and believes that effective communication with patients is essential to quality care, access to care, and assuring a patient’s adherence to treatment plans, all of which are important to the delivery of quality health care with successful outcomes.
• Our patients come from linguistically and ethnically varied backgrounds that reflect the broad diversity of Contra Costa County’s population.
The “Truth”• Daily occurrence of unaddressed language
barriers in the US is an open secret• Survey of providers at our Hospital and HC - Admittedly “nonproficient” speakers are using
their ‘pretend’ language often or everyday.• Many providers ‘just get by’ without interpretation.• Many admit to “avoiding communication” with LEP patients.
Excuses?
• Ad hoc interpreters “good enough”• Professional interpreters slow things down• Equipment caused barriers• Patients didn’t ask for/don’t want interpreters• ?HIPAA• Provider with “good enough” language skills• “This is America, we speak English”
Quality• Professional healthcare interpreters decrease
important errors/encounter in terms of omission, false fluency, substitution, edtiorialization, addition
• Ad hoc interpreters are significantly more likely to make important errors
Benefits of Language Services
• Improved quality patient care and better health outcomes
• Improved patient flow for limited English proficient patients
• Improved patient satisfaction • Compliance with federal & state
regulations
Regulations
•Federal government- Title VI (CLAS standards)- Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
•State laws (more that any other state)•Joint Commission•Malpractice law
- “standard of care:” adequate steps to be certain that he fully understands [the patient’s] complaints
Title VI
Civil Rights Act of 1964• Federal Aid recipients• Oral and written language assistance to Limited
English Proficiency (LEP) people“No person in the US shall, on the ground of race,
color, or national origin, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000d
“National origin” includes individuals with LEP
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
Deaf or Hard of Hearing– Federal Aid recipients– Equal service to Deaf persons– Remove barriers that prevent Deaf persons from
participating in care
Joint Commission
• National Patient Safety Goals - Goal #13 – Encourage patient’s active involvement in their own care as a patient safety strategy
Malpractice Case
An adolescent Latino boy is found by an EMS crew with altered mental status. A caregiver uses the term "intoxicado" to describe the boy's condition. She intended to convey that the patient has been "nauseated." Healthcare personnel, without the aid of an interpreter, presume that the boy is "intoxicated." Immediate imaging of the patient's brain is not performed and the correct diagnosis of a ruptured aneurysm with intra-cranial hemorrhage is delayed. The outcome is irreversible brain damage and quadriplegia. The family is awarded $71 million.
• In person interpretation available – CMIs
• Health Care Interpreter Network (HCIN)
• Refugee program staff• Contracted Interpreters for on-site and phone
interpretation• Translation vendor for written
documents
• CCHS part of a network of safety net hospitals and health systems.
• Calls (phone/video) routed to our interpreters first• Then to other network partners• Then to Language Line – client ID and cost center (audio
only)
HCIN
Contra Costa Health ServicesHealth Care Interpreter Network
HCIN
INTERPRETER Any Language, Any Time
TO REQUEST AN INTERPRETER
DIAL: (9) 313-8360LANGUAGE DIRECTORY
01 - Spanish 11 - Tagalog
02 - American Sign 12 - Tongan
03 - Cantonese 13 - Russian
04 - Mandarin 14 - Armenian
05 - Vietnamese 15- Farsi
06 - Korean 16 - Hindi/Dari
07 - Hmong 17 - Punjabi
08 - Cambodian 18 - Arabic
09 - Lao 19 - Mixteco
10 - Mien 20 - Thai
For all other languages - 00
Report equipment problems to: (9) 313-6323
In the event of a system failurecall (800) 523-1786 for your contracted
language service provider.
Requests for interpreters not provided by HCIN automatically roll over to
Language Line Services.
Your Language Line ID is
Client ID: 297300
Cost Center: 6386
Contra Costa Health ServicesHealth Care Interpreter Network
POLYCOM VIDEO INSTRUCTIONSPlug power cord into outletPlug computer cable into HCIN data portPress Power button on front of unit—wait 45 secondsDial ext 8360 using the remote
Press the Call Button When you hear the welcome message, press the number of the desired language (see directory below)To adjust volume pressTo hang up the call pressTurn power button off
01 - Spanish 11 - Tagalog
02 - American Sign ** 12 - Tongan 03 - Cantonese 13 - Russian 04 - Mandarin 14 - Armenian 05 - Vietnamese 15 - Farsi/Dari
06 - Korean 16 - Hindi 07 - Hmong 17 - Punjabi 08 - Cambodian 18 - Arabic
09 - Lao 19 - Mixteco 10 - Mien 20 - Thai
** After the announcement press 1
For all other languages - 00Requests for interpreters not provided by HCIN automatically roll over to Language Line
Services.
Your Language Line Client ID: 297300 Your Cost Center: 6352
Report equipment problems to: 925-313-6323 In the event of a system failure call
(800) 523-1786 for your contracted language service provider
Provider Resources Available:
http://sites.google.com/a/ccfamilymed.com/contra-costa-family-practice-residency-preceptors-home/Home