Language-discordant care in pediatric neurosurgery: parent and provider perspectives on challenges and multilevel solutions to reduce disparities.

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics Pub Date : 2024-03-22 Print Date: 2024-06-01 DOI:10.3171/2024.1.PEDS23435
Gabriela D Ruiz Colón, Sylvia Bereknyei Merrell, Diana C Poon, Kelly B Mahaney, Cormac O Maher, Laura M Prolo
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: In the United States, Spanish is the second most spoken language, with nearly 42 million individuals speaking Spanish at home. Spanish speakers have been noted to have higher rates of unfavorable neurosurgical outcomes; however, to the authors' knowledge, no study has explored the experiences of patients, caregivers, and providers receiving or delivering neurosurgical care in language-discordant settings. In this study, the authors sought to identify challenges faced by pediatric neurosurgery providers and Spanish-speaking parents communicating with a language barrier and propose solutions to address those challenges.

Methods: Spanish-speaking parents and pediatric neurosurgery providers were invited to participate in semistructured interviews. Purposeful sampling was used to recruit Spanish-speaking parents whose child had recently undergone neurological surgery at the authors' institution and to identify pediatric neurosurgery clinical team members to interview, including physicians, advanced practice providers, and interpreters. Codes were inductively developed and applied to transcripts by two researchers. Thematic analysis was conducted to identify challenges faced by parents and providers.

Results: Twenty individuals were interviewed, including parents (n = 8), advanced practice providers (n = 5), physicians (n = 3), interpreters (n = 2), a social worker (n = 1), and a nurse (n = 1). Three challenges were identified. 1) Compared with English-speaking parents, providers noted that Spanish-speaking parents were less likely to ask questions or raise new concerns. Concurrently, Spanish-speaking parents expressed a desire to better understand their child's future medical needs, care, and development. 2) There is a dearth of high-quality resources available in the Spanish language to supplement patient and parent neurosurgical education. 3) Both parents and providers invariably prefer in-person interpreters; however, their availability is limited.

Conclusions: Three challenges were identified by Spanish-speaking parents of pediatric neurosurgery patients and providers when receiving or delivering care through a language barrier. The authors discuss multilevel solutions that, if deployed, could directly address these shared challenges. Furthermore, optimizing communication may help mitigate the disparities experienced by non-English-speaking Hispanic/Latino individuals when receiving neurosurgical care.

小儿神经外科的语言障碍护理:家长和医疗服务提供者对挑战的看法以及减少差异的多层次解决方案。
目的:在美国,西班牙语是第二大使用语言,有近 4200 万人在家中讲西班牙语。据悉,讲西班牙语的人患神经外科手术不良后果的比例较高;然而,据作者所知,还没有研究探讨过患者、护理人员和医疗人员在语言不通的环境中接受或提供神经外科护理的经历。在这项研究中,作者试图找出小儿神经外科医疗服务提供者和讲西班牙语的家长在语言不通的情况下沟通所面临的挑战,并提出应对这些挑战的解决方案:方法:邀请讲西班牙语的家长和小儿神经外科医生参加半结构式访谈。我们采用了有目的的抽样调查方法,招募了其子女最近在作者所在机构接受了神经外科手术的讲西班牙语的家长,并确定了小儿神经外科临床团队成员,包括医生、高级医疗服务提供者和口译人员。两位研究人员对记录誊本进行了归纳和编码。研究人员进行了主题分析,以确定家长和医疗服务提供者所面临的挑战:对 20 人进行了访谈,包括家长(8 人)、高级医疗服务提供者(5 人)、医生(3 人)、口译员(2 人)、社会工作者(1 人)和护士(1 人)。我们发现了三个挑战1) 与讲英语的家长相比,服务提供者注意到讲西班牙语的家长不太可能提问或提出新的问题。同时,讲西班牙语的家长表示希望更好地了解孩子未来的医疗需求、护理和发展。2) 缺乏高质量的西班牙语资源来补充患者和家长的神经外科教育。3) 家长和医疗服务提供者都希望能有亲临现场的口译人员,但他们的可用性有限:结论:讲西班牙语的小儿神经外科患者家长和医疗服务提供者在接受或提供医疗服务时遇到了语言障碍,他们发现了三个挑战。作者讨论了多层次的解决方案,如果采用这些解决方案,可以直接应对这些共同的挑战。此外,优化沟通可能有助于减轻不讲英语的西班牙裔/拉美裔人士在接受神经外科护理时所经历的差异。
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来源期刊
Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics
Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
10.50%
发文量
307
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Information not localiced
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