Journal Article10.1007/S10903-008-9222-7
Patient-Physician Language Concordance and Lifestyle Counseling Among Spanish-Speaking Patients
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TL;DR: Spanish-speaking patients are more likely to discuss diet and exercise modification if they have a Spanish-speaking physician compared to those having a non-Spanish- speaking physician.
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Abstract: Objective Patient-physician language discordance is associated with worse quality of healthcare for patients with limited English proficiency. Patients with language-discordant physicians have more problems understanding medical situations. The impact of patient-physician language concordance on lifestyle counseling among Spanish-speaking patients is not known. Methods We performed a retrospective medical record review and identified 306 Spanish-speaking patients who used interpreter services between June 2001 and June 2006 in two Boston-based primary care practices. Our primary outcome was counseling on exercise, diet, and smoking. Our main predictor of interest was patient-physician language concordance. Results Patients with language-concordant physicians were more likely to be counseled on diet and physical activity compared to patients with language-discordant physicians. After adjustment for age, sex, insurance status, number of primary care visits, and comorbidity score, these differences in counseling persisted for diet [odds ratio (OR) = 2.2, CI 1.3–3.7] and physical activity (OR = 2.3, CI 1.4–3.8). There was no significant difference with regard to discussion of smoking (OR = 1.3, CI 0.8–2.1). Conclusions Spanish-speaking patients are more likely to discuss diet and exercise modification if they have a Spanish-speaking physician compared to those having a non-Spanish-speaking physician. Further research is needed to explore whether matching Spanish-speaking patients with Spanish-speaking providers may improve lifestyle counseling.
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A Systematic Review of the Impact of Patient-Physician Non-English Language Concordance on Quality of Care and Outcomes.
TL;DR: To systematically evaluate the impact of truly language-concordant care on outcomes and draw meaningful conclusions, future studies must include an assessment of clinician language proficiency.
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Association of Patient-Physician Language Concordance and Glycemic Control for Limited-English Proficiency Latinos With Type 2 Diabetes.
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TL;DR: There was a significant net improvement in glycemic and LDL control among patients who switched from language-discordant PCPs to concordantPCPs relative to those who switched between January 1, 2007, and December 31, 2013.
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TL;DR: An understanding of language barriers can help nurses find appropriate strategies to overcome such barriers and, consequently, enhance the provision of effective care to patients affected by language barriers in any clinical setting in any healthcare system.
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TL;DR: In order to address racial health disparities, and lower the burden of chronic illness, culturally sensitive strategies must be implemented to enhance delivery of effective health-promotion messages by physicians, particularly among at-risk communities.
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