Content area

Abstract

Background

Surgical and procedural patient care settings require efficient patient flow. The primary goal of this study was to assess use and efficiency of language services for our limited English proficiency (LEP) patients undergoing surgical and outpatient procedures.

Methods

Patient language services needs were recorded from our operating room and procedural locations over a two and a half month period in 2016. Time from in-person interpreter request to arrival was recorded. Frequency of language service modality used and reason for telephone and professional video remote interpreting (VRI) rather than in person professional services was queried.

Results

Mean time from in-person interpreter request until arrival was 19 min. Variation was high. No cases were cancelled due to lack of available interpretive services and no LEP patient underwent a procedure without requested interpretative service assistance.

Conclusions

Time for in person professional interpreter assistance was short but highly variable. Access to telephone interpretive services and VRI services ensured assistance when in person interpreters were immediately unavailable.

With the numbers of LEP patients increasing over time along with any new mandates for providing language assistance, the stress on hospital patient service units and the financial implications for many health care facilities will likely continue as challenges.

Details

Title
Assessment of the efficiency of language interpreter services in a busy surgical and procedural practice
Author
Burkle, Christopher M; Anderson, Kathleen A; YaPa Xiong; Guerra, Andrea E; Tschida-Reuter, Daniel A
Publication year
2017
Publication date
2017
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
e-ISSN
14726963
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1925243844
Copyright
Copyright BioMed Central 2017