Effective Use of Interpreter Services for Diverse Patients in a Safety-Net Hospital: Provider Perceptions of Barriers and Solutions

Culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) patients should but do not routinely receive professional interpretation. The authors examined provider perceptions of barriers and solutions to interpreter services (IS) in a safety-net hospital to inform quality improvement (QI). A 13-item survey was di...

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Veröffentlicht in:Joint Commission journal on quality and patient safety 2024-10, Vol.50 (10), p.700-710
Hauptverfasser: Slade, Ian R., Avery, Aspen D., Gonzalez, Carmen, Chung, Christine, Qiu, Qian, Simpson, Yvonne M., Ector, Christine, Vavilala, Monica S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) patients should but do not routinely receive professional interpretation. The authors examined provider perceptions of barriers and solutions to interpreter services (IS) in a safety-net hospital to inform quality improvement (QI). A 13-item survey was distributed to 750 clinicians representing 10 services across professional roles, including social workers. Closed- and open-ended questions addressed accessing IS, IS value, and care for CALD patients. Respondents ranked eight barriers to routine IS use and provided ideas for improvement. Descriptive statistics characterized survey results in aggregate and by professional role and care team. Quantitative and qualitative results were triangulated for agreement between survey domains and coded free-text response themes. A total of 221 responses were analyzed (29.5% response rate). Cost was the lowest-ranked barrier across roles. Leading barriers were efficiency pressures and cumbersome access. Free-text responses agreed with these findings. CALD patients were perceived to have higher complication risk by 87.5% of social workers but by 56.8% of other roles. Recommendations to increase IS varied by team: streamlined access process (46.2% emergency, 37.8% inpatient respondents), expanded in-person interpretation (55.6% inpatient, 45.8% perioperative respondents), and better equipment (44.4% outpatient, 35.9% emergency, 25.0% perioperative respondents). Provider experiences vary by care team and interpretation modality. Interpretation services are cumbersome to access and compete with efficiency pressures, leading to shortcuts that fail to provide adequate language access. Three initial QI efforts resulted: increased video interpretation equipment, a new language access committee, and a new language access leadership role.
ISSN:1553-7250
1938-131X
1938-131X
DOI:10.1016/j.jcjq.2024.07.002