• J Gen Intern Med · Aug 2021

    Patient Perspectives on the Quality of Professional Interpretation: Results from LASI Study.

    • Sarita Pathak, Steven E Gregorich, Lisa C Diamond, Sunita Mutha, Esme Seto, Jennifer Livaudais-Toman, and Leah Karliner.
    • Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
    • J Gen Intern Med. 2021 Aug 1; 36 (8): 2386-2391.

    BackgroundThe use of professional interpretation is associated with improvements in overall healthcare of patients with limited English proficiency (LEP). For these patients, it is important to understand whether quality of professional interpretation in-person is preserved using remote interpretation modalities (video-conferencing, telephone).ObjectiveTo compare patient perceptions of professional interpretation quality delivered in-person, via video-conferencing, or via telephone during in-person primary care clinical visits.DesignSecondary analysis of a telephone survey conducted within 1 week after a primary care visit PARTICIPANTS: The 326 Chinese and Latino survey participants with LEP who reported using a professional interpreter-in-person, video medical conferencing (VMI), or telephone-during their visit MAIN MEASURES: Six items about the quality of interpretation: five detailed items scored as a scale, and a sixth overall quality item (range 1 = poor to 5 = excellent) KEY RESULTS: While there was a range for all modalities, most patients reported "very good" or "excellent" quality on both the scale and the overall single quality measure. In adjusted analysis, patients rated VMI quality the highest, followed by in-person and then telephone on both the 5-item scale (adjusted means: VMI 3.91, in-person 3.86, telephone 3.73) and the overall single quality item (adjusted means: VMI 3.94, in-person 3.85, telephone 3.83); however, no two-way comparisons were statistically significant (p values ranged 0.15-0.95).ConclusionsOur results highlight that, overall, the interpretation experience among patients who used any type of professional interpretation was positive, and that the quality found with in-person interpretation is preserved for remote modalities. Health systems should consider a multimodality approach to interpreter service provision including options for accessing professional interpreters via all three modalities based on communication and access needs.© 2021. Society of General Internal Medicine.

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