Introduction The growing diversity of the United States population and strong evidence of disparities in health care make it critically important to educate health care professionals to effectively address issues of culture. To that end, we developed a simulation for teaching interpreter use in a telehealth setting. Our contribution of non-English language preference (NELP) patient cases in Spanish, Tagalog, French, and Igbo advances existing literature by combining the skills of interpreter use and telehealth while widening the array of cultures represented. Methods Simulations were implemented for two cohorts of 60 first-year medical students. In the pilot, nine groups of six to seven students and one faculty met via Zoom with an NELP pat...
Recent waves of immigrants pose new challenges to the health care system of host countries, and one ...
The purpose of this study is to explore and describe the experiences of “Spanish speaking, Spanish d...
An estimated 53 million Hispanics currently live in the United States, comprising 17 percent of the ...
Abstract Studies suggest that the use of culturally appropriate communication in patient encounters ...
Limited English proficiency is a known barrier to quality health care outcomes (Green 2017, Helmi 20...
With half of the foreign born population in the United States speaking English less than very well, ...
This paper reports on an interdisciplinary training initiative involving student interpreters and me...
Health care encounters can be stressful, compromising a patient’s ability to fully engage and unders...
In our current societies, people from different backgrounds and cultures who speak different languag...
abstract: The thesis examines the intricacies involved with the language barriers experienced by pat...
The growing diversity in the United States brings with it multiple cultures, languages, and communic...
Research on Hispanics/Latinos over the past decade with respect to the role of language and culture ...
Abstract Background Although the number of people living in the United States with limited English p...
This thesis will present an exploration of how healthcare interpreters utilize intercultural communi...
The current study explores Spanish linguistics in the medical field and the crucial role of the medi...
Recent waves of immigrants pose new challenges to the health care system of host countries, and one ...
The purpose of this study is to explore and describe the experiences of “Spanish speaking, Spanish d...
An estimated 53 million Hispanics currently live in the United States, comprising 17 percent of the ...
Abstract Studies suggest that the use of culturally appropriate communication in patient encounters ...
Limited English proficiency is a known barrier to quality health care outcomes (Green 2017, Helmi 20...
With half of the foreign born population in the United States speaking English less than very well, ...
This paper reports on an interdisciplinary training initiative involving student interpreters and me...
Health care encounters can be stressful, compromising a patient’s ability to fully engage and unders...
In our current societies, people from different backgrounds and cultures who speak different languag...
abstract: The thesis examines the intricacies involved with the language barriers experienced by pat...
The growing diversity in the United States brings with it multiple cultures, languages, and communic...
Research on Hispanics/Latinos over the past decade with respect to the role of language and culture ...
Abstract Background Although the number of people living in the United States with limited English p...
This thesis will present an exploration of how healthcare interpreters utilize intercultural communi...
The current study explores Spanish linguistics in the medical field and the crucial role of the medi...
Recent waves of immigrants pose new challenges to the health care system of host countries, and one ...
The purpose of this study is to explore and describe the experiences of “Spanish speaking, Spanish d...
An estimated 53 million Hispanics currently live in the United States, comprising 17 percent of the ...