Hospitals, clinics lack interpreters. (Ailing System).Maria Erdmann, Janelle Frost, Megan Marz, Heather J. Parker, Kristen Schorsch, Rupa Shenoy, Steve Sierra Tamirra C. Stewart. All she needed was a routine prenatal prenatal /pre·na·tal/ (-na´tal) preceding birth. pre·na·tal adj. Preceding birth. Also called antenatal. prenatal preceding birth. check-up. But Rosa Campos Campos (käm`p s), city (1996 pop. 391,299), Rio de Janeiro state, SE Brazil, on the Paraíba River near its mouth. dreaded the thought of visiting a northwest suburban Rolling Meadows Rolling Meadows, city (1990 pop. 22,591), Cook co., NE Ill., a suburb of Chicago; inc. 1955. There is research and development and the manufacture of office supplies and electronic components. clinic.
"I felt terrible because there was nobody who spoke Spanish there. I couldn't say anything," said Campos, a Mexican native who asked that her real name not be used. Desperate, she enlisted her husband's nephew as an impromptu A Windows query and reporting tool from Cognos with support for a large variety of databases. It is capable of generating cross tabs for spreadsheets such as Excel, Lotus for Windows and Quattro Pro for Windows. interpreter. But when a doctor began asking about "most private matters," Campos kept silent. The idea of sharing such intimate details with the nephew was too embarrassing. "I felt like somebody was undressing me," she said through an interpreter. Others who don't speak English tell similar tales of struggling to communicate with their doctors. It's a problem often faced by immigrants and refugees as they increasingly flow into suburban hospitals and clinics, The Chicago Reporter has found. By law, hospitals and even small private practices that receive federal funds Federal Funds Funds deposited to regional Federal Reserve Banks by commercial banks, including funds in excess of reserve requirements. Notes: These non-interest bearing deposits are lent out at the Fed funds rate to other banks unable to meet overnight reserve are required to provide interpreting services. But many are limping along with a patchwork of makeshift methods to communicate with non-English-speaking patients, shows a Reporter survey of 200 suburban health care facilities. Most rely on bilingual family members, off-site telephone interpreting services or untrained staff members who must interpret patients' symptoms in addition to doing their regular jobs. But such methods aren't good enough, said Elizabeth Jacobs Elizabeth Derr Jacobs (1903 - May 21, 1983) was an anthropologist specializing in the native cultures of the Pacific Northwest. She is known particularly for her work on the Nehalem Tillamook, the northernmost subgroup of the Tillamook, whom she studied in the 1930s. , senior attending physician at Cook County Hospital, who co-chairs the policy and research committee at the National Council on Interpreting in Health Care. "As health care providers, it's our professional obligation and duty to be able to communicate with patients. It's truly the basis of medical care," she said. "But I wonder if that's possible under these conditions." From May through August, the Reporter surveyed 52 hospitals, 22 outpatient surgery Outpatient Surgery, also referred to as ambulatory surgery or same-day surgery, is surgery that does not require an overnight hospital stay. The term “outpatient” arises from the fact that surgery patients may go home do not need an overnight hospital centers and 126 community clinics located in suburban Cook County, and DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will counties. The Reporter found that: * One out of every five clinics offers no interpreting services of any kind. * 12 hospitals, 5 surgery centers and 5 clinics employ interpreters. * More than half of the facilities encourage patients to bring their families or friends to interpret. * 145 facilities use employees with other jobs to interpret, and 80 of them rely on bilingual clerks, janitors or other employees with no medical background. * Such employees were trained on interpreting skills at 22 facilities and evaluated at 26 facilities. The Reporter's findings show "a stark reality of how the health care industry has failed to respond to the needs of immigrants," said Sandra Del Toro Toro may refer to:
"They need to realize that they can't just keep ignoring the growing immigrant community," she said. Hospital and clinic administrators say they want to help patients, but cannot afford the costs. "A lot of what we hear is the frustration," said Amy Lee For the saxophone player with Jimmy Buffett's Coral Reefer Band, see . Amy Hartzler (born Amy Lynn Lee and best known as Amy Lee, December 13, 1981 in Riverside, California) is an American singer-songwriter and classically-trained pianist. , spokesperson for the American Hospital Association American Hospital Association (AHA), n.pr a nonprofit national organization of individuals, institutions, and organizations engaged in direct patient care. The association works to promote the improvement of health care services. , which represents roughly 5,000 hospitals nationwide. "Because hospitals have so many financial stresses, it's difficult for them to find the money for interpreters." Others say requiring doctors to provide interpreters is unconstitutional. "Our right to free speech includes the right to speak in English, and requiring doctors to provide interpreters violates that right," said K.C. McAlpin, executive director of ProEnglish, a national group of English language English language, member of the West Germanic group of the Germanic subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages (see Germanic languages). Spoken by about 470 million people throughout the world, English is the official language of about 45 nations. advocates based in Arlington, Va. But the lack of trained, dedicated interpreters threatens the health of immigrants and refugees, advocates say. For example, 8 percent of more than 4,000 uninsured patients surveyed in 16 cities were in need of an interpreter but did not get one, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. an April study by The Access Project at Brandeis University Brandeis University, at Waltham, Mass.; coeducational; chartered and opened 1948. Although Brandeis was founded by members of the American Jewish community, the university operates as an independent, nonsectarian institution. in Boston. Of that group, more than a quarter left the hospital without understanding how to take prescribed medications--a problem experienced by 2 percent of the general population. "Our study shows that the lack of interpreters has a bearing on a whole experience that people have at hospitals," said Carol Pryor, policy analyst at The Access Project. "It could potentially affect them in ways that might cause serious damage to their health." Immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important. Wave Over the last decade, immigrants settled in suburban Cook and five collar counties The collar counties is a colloquial term describing the five counties in Illinois that surround Cook County. The collar counties are Lake, McHenry, DuPage, Will, and Kane Counties. See also: Chicagoland at a rate of more than 34,000 a year, defying historical patterns of immigrants flocking to poor urban centers. "Many immigrants are moving right into the suburbs now--and not to the city at all," said Robert Paral, fellow at the Institute for Metropolitan Affairs at Roosevelt University Roosevelt University is a four-year, private institute of higher education with full service campuses in Chicago's Loop and northwest suburban Schaumburg. It also offers classes in communities, schools, and corporations, and has the mission of being a metropolitan university and , who authored a 2000 study on the region's immigrants. By 2000, the immigrant population in the Chicago suburbs had surged to 790,000, a 77.5 percent increase from a decade earlier, according to the census. More than 15 percent of the population--or one in seven residents--is now foreign-born, up from 9.9 percent a decade ago. The influx has brought an unprecedented linguistic diversity: One In five suburban residents now lives in a household where a foreign language is spoken, and one in 10 speaks English less than "very well." The Chicago suburbs feature a mix of languages drawn from around the world, including English, Spanish, Chinese, Vietnamese, Greek and Tagalog--a language of the Philippines. All in all, more than 37 languages are spoken in the region. Immigration has also raised a slew of questions, most of them revolving around how courts, schools and other public facilities can cope with such a variety of foreign languages. But it is in hospitals and other health care facilities where one of the most costly and intimate effects of the immigration wave is taking hold. The health care industry has long highlighted the expense of treating immigrants, who are more likely than others to be uninsured and unable to pay. The annual cost to provide interpreters alone is estimated to be as much as $267.6 million nationwide, according to the Office of Management and Budget The Office of Management and Budget (OMB), formerly the Bureau of the Budget, is an agency of the federal government that evaluates, formulates, and coordinates management procedures and program objectives within and among departments and agencies of the Executive Branch. , a branch of the White House. But others say the failure to provide language assistance will prove even more costly to the Industry in the future. They point out that census projections show the nation's foreign-born population could more than double to reach 53 million by 2050. In west suburban Aurora, Provena Mercy Center is taking no chances. The 356-bed hospital first hired an interpreter in 1996, and now spends about $80,000 annually to maintain a team of seven interpreters to meet soaring demand. It's expensive, but a valuable investment, said Nicholas J. Loise, vice president of marketing and planning. "We look at it as one of the ways that we serve our community," he said. During the 1990s, Aurora's foreign-born population more than doubled, census figures show. More than a third of its residents now speak foreign languages at home, and one in five speaks English less than "very well." "Language barrier is always an issue. It's very common in our community," said Maricela Perez, parish nurse at St. Nicholas Catholic Church in Aurora. In 1999, Perez interviewed 768 Spanish-speaking parishioners at the church, and found that more than half considered language as a barrier preventing them from seeking health care. Yet, at most clinics, interpreters are in short supply, Perez said. "I've gotten in so many arguments over this," she said. "They deny the [interpreting] service to my patients all the time." To tackle such problems, a group of advocates--known as Companeros en Salud, or Partners in Health--gathers each month at Provena. The group is three years old and relies on volunteers from grassroots organizations It may never be fully completed or, depending on its its nature, it may be that it can never be completed. However, new and revised entries in the list are always welcome. and others who serve Aurora's burgeoning Latino community. In 2000, the group created Language Access to Healthcare, a nonprofit A corporation or an association that conducts business for the benefit of the general public without shareholders and without a profit motive. Nonprofits are also called not-for-profit corporations. Nonprofit corporations are created according to state law. interpreter bank. The agency dispatches its 23 trained Spanish, Albanian and Chinese interpreters to area hospitals and clinics, and charges $25 an hour for the service. "We began providing the service because of the tremendous need," said Executive Director Sal Valadez. "We have to get beyond asking janitors to interpret in what sometimes can be life-and-death situations." Sound Business In August 2000, an executive order signed by then-President Bill Clinton reminded physicians and hospitals receiving federal funds that, under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, they must provide services that can be understood by non-English speakers. To comply, they have a wide range of options, such as hiring interpreters, using bilingual employees, contracting with paid services Paid Services are the not-free electronic commerce of digital services and information goods in digital media. Examples of digital media are for instance the world wide web or mobile media (SMS, WAP). or volunteers, or using telephone interpreting services. But a guideline Issued by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Noun 1. Department of Health and Human Services - the United States federal department that administers all federal programs dealing with health and welfare; created in 1979 Health and Human Services, HHS stresses that interpreters must be trained and provided at no cost, and that doctors should not rely on patients' friends and families--especially children. In Illinois, a similar rule has been on the books since 1993, when the General Assembly passed the Language Assistance Services Act. But the law imposes no penalties against those who fail to comply. "The political climate at that time was much more conservative, and that made it hard to pass legislation that had more teeth," said former state Sen. Jesus Garcia, who proposed the legislation. "My hope was always that, at subsequent time, the law could be beefed up, so that we'd have more enforcement authority." Garcia is Garcia I might refer to:
State Sen. Miguel del Valle Miguel del Valle is the current City Clerk of Chicago and the former Illinois State Senator for the 2nd district of Chicago, which he had served since 1987. Early life , a Northwest Side Democrat, said he's willing to sponsor a tougher bill. "Now that we have a Latino legislative caucus caucus: see convention. that didn't exist when this legislation was proposed, we ought to go back and see if we can strengthen the language that was put in there," he said. But, if events in other states are any indication, such an attempt could face stiff opposition. In Virginia, for example, four doctors and ProEnglish filed a federal lawsuit in March, contending that President Clinton's executive order infringes on their First Amendment rights. "We are filing suit because this thing is outrageous, burdensome and--most of all--unconstitutional," said ProEnglish's McAlpin. "It's the worst possible thing for the medical system." Other critics say the issue has less to do with free speech than with exorbitant interpreter costs. For example, Language Line Services, which provides phone interpreters in 140 different languages, charges doctors between $2.20 and $4.50 per minute--up to $270 an hour--depending on the language and time of day. The cost can far exceed the amount of reimbursements doctors receive for treating a Medicaid patient, which can be as low as $13, according to the Chicago-based American Medical Association American Medical Association (AMA), professional physicians' organization (founded 1847). Its goals are to protect the interests of American physicians, advance public health, and support the growth of medical science. . "If I had to pay 10 or 20 times, out of my pocket, what I would get reimbursed for seeing a patient with an interpreter, I would think twice about if I was going to do it," said Dr. Richard F. Corlin, immediate past president of the AMA (Automatic Message Accounting) The recording and reporting of telephone calls within a telephone system. It includes the calling and called parties and start and stop times of the call. . "It's an absolutely foolish and counterproductive coun·ter·pro·duc·tive adj. Tending to hinder rather than serve one's purpose: "Violation of the court order would be counterproductive" Philip H. Lee. bit of legislation, which is clearly going to reduce access to care for those whom it was supposed to increase access to care." Advocates say such objections are shortsighted short·sight·ed adj. 1. Nearsighted; myopic. 2. Lacking foresight. short sight . In fact, they say,
providing interpreters is sound business: It will not only help attract
more patients but save money by avoiding unnecessary tests and reducing
costly emergency room visits.
"In the long run, what is more cost-effective? Having to do a CAT scan CAT scan (kăt) [computerized axial tomography], X-ray technique that allows relatively safe, painless, and rapid diagnosis in previously inaccessible areas of the body; also called CT scan. three times because a doctor doesn't know that it was just done in another facility?" said Wilma Alvarado-Little, manager of interpreter services at Children's Memorial Hospital With almost 1,100 pediatric specialists focusing on 70 specialties in multiple locations, Children's Memorial Hospital routinely provides more care to more young people than any other Chicago-area hospital or medical center. in Chicago. Interpreters can also ensure the delivery of good preventive care Preventive care is a set of measures taken in advance of symptoms to prevent illness or injury. This type of care is best exemplified by routine physical examinations and immunizations. The emphasis is on preventing illnesses before they occur. See also
Des Plaines (dĕs plānz), city (1990 pop. 53,223), Cook co., NE Ill., a suburb of Chicago on the Des Plaines River; inc. 1925. Among its manufactures are chemicals and electronic equipment. . Otherwise, "people will end up in emergency rooms, and it'll get more costly," he said. Misdiagnoses--and expensive malpractice malpractice, failure to provide professional services with the skill usually exhibited by responsible and careful members of the profession, resulting in injury, loss, or damage to the party contracting those services. suits resulting from them--could also be avoided by having interpreters, said Mireya Vera, director of community services at Westlake Hospital in west suburban Melrose Park Melrose Park, village (1990 pop. 20,859), Cook co., NE Ill., an industrial suburb of Chicago; inc. 1893. It has large railroad yards and shops, steel mills, and factories that make a wide variety of products. . "When you think of the kinds of things that can go wrong when you don't speak the person's language, you can't afford not to have an interpreter," she said. Diverse Workforce Interpretation in medical settings can be a tricky business. First, there's the technical medical terminology Medical terminology is a vocabulary for accurately describing the human body and associated components, conditions, processes and procedures in a science-based manner. This systematic approach to word building and term comprehension is based on the concept of: (1) Word roots, (2) to interpret. "The fact that you are fluent in another language doesn't necessarily mean that you are capable of interpreting complicated medical terms," said Jing jing (jing) [Chinese] one of the basic substances that according to traditional Chinese medicine pervade the body, usually translated as "essence"; the body reserves or constitutional makeup, replenished by food and rest, that supports Zhang, director of community health programs at Asian Human Services, a Chicago-based nonprofit. Even trained interpreters struggle sometimes, said Silvia S. Schrage, a trained Spanish interpreter and manager of Cross Cultural Communications at Sherman Hospital Sherman Hospital is is the one of largest networks of medical care facilities in the far Northwest Chicago suburbs. It has been one of two full service hospitals in Elgin, Illinois. in west suburban Elgin. When on duty, Schrage always carries a Spanish-English medical dictionary A medical dictionary is a lexicon for words used in medicine. The three major English language medical dictionaries are Stedman's, Taber's, and Dorland's medical dictionaries. . "When you think about all the specialties in medicine, it's very important that, if you don't know Don't know (DK, DKed) "Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party. something, you look it up," she said. Then there are cultural nuances for each patient. "I feel very strongly that culture is as much a barrier to meaningful communication as language is," said Elizabeth Keating, manager of multicultural services at Central DuPage Hospital Central DuPage Hospital, or CDH, is an independent hospital system located throughout DuPage County, Illinois in the United States. Its primary facility is a 361-bed hospital located in Winfield, Illinois. in west suburban Winfield. Good interpreters should know common medical and psychological problems, treatments, and even the history of patients' native countries, said Aida L. Giachello, director of the Midwest Latino Health Research, Training, and Policy Center at the University of Illinois at Chicago This article is about the University of Illinois at Chicago. For other uses, see University of Illinois at Chicago (disambiguation). UIC participates in NCAA Division I Horizon League competition as the UIC Flames in several sports, most notably Basketball. . Knowing that diabetes is prevalent among Latinos, for example, can help make a proper diagnosis, she said. But, to some advocates, any solution that involves interpreters falls short. The goal, they say, should be to recruit more bilingual medical professionals, and train them on their interpreting skills. "I'm real cautious about embracing interpreters," said Carmen Carmen throws over lover for another. [Fr. Lit.: Carmen; Fr. Opera: Bizet, Carmen, Westerman, 189–190] See : Faithlessness Carmen the cards repeatedly spell her death. [Fr. Velasquez, executive director of Alivio Medical Center in Chicago, where all staff members are bilingual. "We do not hire people we're going to have to interpret for. That just doesn't cut it." Mary Lou Siantz, immediate past president of the National Association of Hispanic Nurses, concurred. "People feel more comfortable with a doctor or nurse who can speak their language than with a third-party interpreter," she said. Others agree, to a point. "I do believe that we should have a diverse workforce to meet the needs of all patients, but we are not even near that point," said Jorge Girotti, director of the Hispanic Center for Excellence at the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine. In 2000, minorities made up 24.7 percent of all practicing physicians in the country, though they were 30.9 percent of the U.S. population, according to the AMA. The gaps were even wider among Latinos, who were 12.5 percent of the population but 5 percent of all doctors. Closing that gap would be an enormous task, said William McDade, associate dean for multicultural affairs at the University of Chicago's Pritzker School of Medicine The Pritzker School of Medicine is the M.D. granting unit of the Biological Sciences Division of the University of Chicago. It is located on the University's main campus in the Hyde Park portion of Chicago proper, and matriculated its first class in 1927. . "There are a lot of good would-be doctors cut there who don't get a chance," he said. "It's going to take a long-term strategy to figure out how to change that." In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified" meantime, meanwhile , Girotti said the next best approach is to have a trained interpreter. "It's a good short-term remedy, at the very least," he said.
Immigrant Influx
Over the last decade, immigrants settled in the Chicago suburbs at an
astounding rate, bringing in an unprecedented linguistic diversity.
Foreign-born population
Six-county Six-county
average (1990) average (2000)
Cook (minus Chicago) 10.9% 17.8%
DuPage 9.8% 15.3%
Kane 9.8% 15.7%
Lake 9.8% 14.8%
McHenry 5.5% 7.2%
Will 6.0% 7.2%
Note: Table made from bar graph
Language other than English spoken at home
Six-county Six-county
average (1990) average (2000)
Cook (minus Chicago) 15.1% 23.6%
DuPage 12.0% 19.3%
Kane 13.9% 22.9%
Lake 11.8% 19.6%
McHenry 6.3% 10.0%
Will 8.0% 11.0%
Note: Table made from bar graph
Speak English less than "very well"
Six-county Six-county
average (1990) average (2000)
Cook
(minus Chicago) 6.1% 10.8%
DuPage 4.2% 7.9%
Kane 6.4% 13.2%
Lake 4.6% 9.2%
McHenry 2.5% 4.4%
Will 2.7% 4.2%
Source: U.S. Census Bureau; analyzed by The Chicago Reporter
Note: Table made from bar graph
Falling Short
By law, hospitals and even small private practices that receive federal
funds such as Medicaid are required to provide language assistance. But
only a handful of suburban facilities use trained interpreters, while
most others rely on a patchwork of makeshift methods to communicate with
non-English-speaking patients. All but 26 clinics offer at least one of
the following services:
Surgery
Hospitals (52) centers (22) Clinics (126)
Employ medical
interpreters 12 5 5
Enlist medical staff
members of interpret 31 18 80
Enlist employees with
no medical background
to interpret 26 12 42
Use off-site telephone
interpreting services 46 9 22
Encourage patients to
bring family or friends
to interpret 14 15 78
Provide written
materials in languages
other than English 47 17 95
Post signs in
languages other
than English 42 17 71
Notes: The Illinois Department of Public Health licenses 59 hospitals
and 35 outpatient surgery centers that operate within suburban Cook
County, and DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will counties. The Chicago
Reporter contacted all 94 facilities for this story; 52 hospitals and 22
surgery centers responded. The Reporter also surveyed 126 community
clinics for a total of 200 facilities. The clinics were picked from the
telephone listings since no official list was available.
Note: Table made from bar graph
Contributing: Maria Erdmann, Janelle Frost, Megan Marz, Heather J. Parker Kristen Schorsch, Rupa Shenoy, Steve Sierra and Tamirra C. Stewate. |
|
||||||||||||||

s)
sight
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion