Communication critical for care
Patient Safety Monitor Alert, September 28, 2005
Want to receive articles like this one in your inbox? Subscribe to Patient Safety Monitor Alert!
Although language barriers present hospital staff with a basic communicative challenge, the differences in speech sometimes mask larger cultural differences. Those societal norms may make reporting medical problems difficult for patients, according to an article in The Boston Globe.
The story features a pregnant Haitian woman who had a cough, but didn't express the severity of the symptom because everyone where she's from coughs. A few months after giving birth, the patient died of Tuberculosis.
A lack of communication leads to a sub-par patient history. That must be augmented with additional tests for medical staff to properly understand the patient's condition. That increases the costs of healthcare, which is then borne by the hospital if the patient is indigent.
Immigrants receive less than half the healthcare treatment of citizens, even though roughly 58% of non-native Americans have insurance. The lack of English proficiency makes understanding physician instruction or forms difficult.
To read the complete article, click here.
Want to receive articles like this one in your inbox? Subscribe to Patient Safety Monitor Alert!
Related Products
Most Popular
- Articles
-
- Q/A: Volume requirement for reporting hydration services
- Featured blog post: Nurses face felony charges after reporting physician to the Texas Medical Board
- Topic: CMS, OESS post new security compliance review information, checklist
- Catch up on what's new with injections and infusions
- What does case-mix index mean to you?
- News and briefs: Oklahoma Osteopathic Association against residency bill change
- QA:Coding multiple initial infusions
- Capturing all necessary codes for IUD insertion and removal can be challenging
- HIPAA Q&A: Answering service messages
- OB services: Coding inside and outside of the package
- E-mailed
-
- Featured blog post: Nurses face felony charges after reporting physician to the Texas Medical Board
- Q/A: Volume requirement for reporting hydration services
- New conflicts of interest create new challenges
- Q&A: Coding 'aspiration without pneumonia'
- Q&A tackles coding questions about injections and infusions
- Joint Commission Center announces handoff communication solutions
- Inside best practice: Reduce patient falls with a stoplight
- Identify modifiable risk factors to prevent patient falls
- Hospitalist-surgeon comanagement has no effect on outcomes
- Case Management Monthly, June 2012
- Searched
