1 / 11

The Importance of Being Bilingual in Today’s Workforce

The Importance of Being Bilingual in Today’s Workforce . Presented by: Lisa M. Morris, MSTD. Our Communities. Hispanic/Latino immigrants in U.S. Largest minority group in U.S. 35 million in continental U.S.

avon
Download Presentation

The Importance of Being Bilingual in Today’s Workforce

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Importance of Being Bilingual in Today’s Workforce Presented by: Lisa M. Morris, MSTD

  2. Our Communities

  3. Hispanic/Latino immigrants in U.S. • Largest minority group in U.S. • 35 million in continental U.S. • Very heterogeneous group with Mexican origin comprising 58% and Puerto Ricans 10%, Cubans 4% and Central/S.Americans. 17% • Many Puerto Ricans engage in transnationalism- sharing key aspects of life between two countries

  4. Medical Interpreters lead to language access • http://www.vimeo.com/14349319

  5. Medical Interpreters: Who are we? • Sign and spoken language interpreters • A voice for the speaker • A bridge in communication • Trained and qualified • Adhere to the interpreter code of ethics with regard to confidentiality, accuracy, neutrality, & respect.

  6. What is our main purpose? • To facilitate understanding in communication between people who speak different languages and come from different cultural worlds. • To ensure the patient’s right to understand and have equal access to health care.

  7. What is our main role? • To transmit verbal, non-verbal, factual, and affective messages accurately and completely without adding, omitting, or editing, to patients and health care providers who do not share language and/or culture.

  8. Quality Interpretation • Facilitates equality in access to health care • Fosters equity and respect for all participants • Respects cultural and linguistic diversity • Improves communication • Dissolves anxiety and fear • Creates rapport and trust

  9. Language and Health Care • Language problems impact multiple aspects of health care (Flores. Med Care Res Rev 2005;62:255-299) • Access to health care • Health status • Use of health services • Patient-physician communication • Satisfaction with care • Patient safety

  10. What are the safety issues? • LEP patients more likely to experience adverse events of serious nature • Untrained bilingual staff and physicians with “false fluency” more likely to err in communication • LEP patients have worse patient experiences (satisfaction, perception of MD, adherence)

  11. Why Language Services are Important • Access to Care • Quality of Care & Patient Satisfaction • Cost of Care • Risk Management • State and Federal Requirements • Makes Business Sense

More Related