Release Date: November 11, 2009
Breast Cancer Physicians Have Limited Access to Trained Interpreters
By Valerie DeBenedette, Contributing Writer
Health Behavior News Service
In a new survey of physicians who treat breast cancer patients, only one-third said they had good access to trained medical interpreters or telephone language-interpretation systems when they needed it. Poor access to interpreters can compromise physician-patient communication that is critically important in cancer care.The survey of 348 physicians took place in the Los Angeles area, where 27 percent of residents — roughly 2.5 million people — have limited English proficiency (LEP) compared with 9 percent in the rest of the United States. Spanish and Asian languages are the predominant first languages for LEP patients in the LA region, but there are many others, said lead study author Danielle Rose, Ph.D.
Rose worked on the study while at the Cancer Prevention and Control Research in the Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of California, Los Angeles. The study appears online in the journal Health Services Research.
Forty-two percent of respondents said they used a trained medical interpreter, 21 percent used a telephone interpreter service (where an interpreter is accessed by phone) and 75 percent reported using untrained interpreters, which could include bilingual office staff or the patient’s friends or family.
“Because of the wide diversity of the Los Angeles population, we were not surprised that many physicians used more than one interpreting option,” Rose said. Physicians at large medical facilities, such as HMOs or large hospitals, were more likely to have better access to trained interpreters or interpreter services.
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Not only in cancer patients but any medical issue its very important to be able to have interpreters at hand to be able to fully communicate with patients in order for them to comprehend exactly what is wrong and how to proceed.
Posted by: Ninon Flasch | November 13, 2009 at 08:27 AM