@DrQuinnCapers4 Linguistic diversity and #multilingualism enhance patient care and science! See: Systematic review by @DrLisaDiamond et al (https://t.co/jlkFr09MJ8), and my call to action in @AcadMedJournal (https://t.co/OIwyuAeDJo) https://t.co/Yc3KkHCJIb
RT @painmanwise: A Systematic Review of the Impact of Patient-Physician Non-English Language Concordance on Quality of Care and Outcomes. h…
A Systematic Review of the Impact of Patient-Physician Non-English Language Concordance on Quality of Care and Outcomes. https://t.co/WmD7WzZqTp
A Systematic Review of the Impact of Patient-Physician Non-English Language Concordance on Quality of Care and Outcomes. https://t.co/WmD7WzZqTp
@ali_oats Language concordance btw patients and clinicians is beneficial. Partial concordance and “getting by” hurts patients. https://t.co/fI4GTjk9zJ
RT @AliciaFMD: PPE muffles sounds and impedes interpretation. Telephone makes that worse. But the main thing is that language concordance…
PPE muffles sounds and impedes interpretation. Telephone makes that worse. But the main thing is that language concordance is so much better for comprehension and for establishing trust. See recent systematic review Diamond, JGIM, 2019 https://t.co/fNhZ3
@domesypantsx3 Totally agree! True language concordance is good for limited English proficient patients but partial concordance could be dangerous: https://t.co/Yl4OHNHZ3S
RT @JournalGIM: In a world that’s more interconnected than ever, doctors often meet patients who speak a different language than their own.…
RT @JournalGIM: In a world that’s more interconnected than ever, doctors often meet patients who speak a different language than their own.…
Grateful for the medical interpreters who assist us navigate the language barrier! TY @HennepinHC for striving to offer this services.
RT @JournalGIM: In a world that’s more interconnected than ever, doctors often meet patients who speak a different language than their own.…
RT @JournalGIM: In a world that’s more interconnected than ever, doctors often meet patients who speak a different language than their own.…
In a world that’s more interconnected than ever, doctors often meet patients who speak a different language than their own. Does a language barrier affect the quality of healthcare doctors provide? And if so, how much? @DrLisaDiamond https://t.co/z047JpYQk
Having a physician who speaks their language improves outcomes for patients with low English proficiency, says a new study in @JournalGIM https://t.co/p0TMd2piP3