Litcius/Paper detail

Language and Cultural Discordance: Barriers to Improved Patient Care and Understanding

Derek Soled

2020Journal of Patient Experience16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Providing optimal health care to patients whose first language is not English remains a major challenge. Medical students, residents, and attendings receive limited cultural competency training, but these short sporadic training courses are not nearly enough to give physicians the proper resources or preparation to understand all their patients' beliefs. Medical interpreters can fill this gap and strengthen health care for these already marginalized communities. It is important to reconceptualize medical interpreters as true collaborators in medicine who can provide valuable insights that extend beyond language interpretation at the bedside. Physicians would benefit from the insights of these professionals who can function as both language and cultural interpreters who know these patient communities well. Improved communication between physicians and interpreters would not violate traditional physician-patient boundaries but would instead strengthen this relationship to provide the best possible care.

Topics & Concepts

InterpreterLanguage barrierInterpretation (philosophy)Health careFunction (biology)Limited English proficiencyMedical educationMedicineCultural competencePsychologyNursingLinguisticsPedagogyComputer sciencePolitical scienceBiologyEvolutionary biologyProgramming languagePhilosophyLawInterpreting and Communication in HealthcareCultural Competency in Health CareMigration, Health and Trauma