PURPOSE Professional interpreters can improve healthcare quality and outcomes when there is language discordance between patients and health care providers. Multidisciplinary rehabilitation relies on nuanced communication; however, the use of… Click to show full abstract
PURPOSE Professional interpreters can improve healthcare quality and outcomes when there is language discordance between patients and health care providers. Multidisciplinary rehabilitation relies on nuanced communication; however, the use of interpreters in rehabilitation is underexplored. This study aimed to examine patterns of health care interpreter use in an inpatient rehabilitation setting. METHODS A retrospective cohort study was conducted including patients admitted for subacute rehabilitation during 2019-2020 identified as having limited English proficiency. Patterns of interpreter use (professional and "ad hoc") and rehabilitation outcomes were evaluated via medical record review. RESULTS Eighty-five participants were included. During inpatient rehabilitation (median 17 [12-28] days), most clinical interactions (95%) occurred without an interpreter present. Patterns of interpreter use were variable; with greater use of ad hoc versus professional interpreters (received by 60% versus 49% of the cohort, respectively). Those who interacted with a professional interpreter had a longer length-of-stay, larger Functional Independence Measure (FIM) gain, and lower rate of hospital readmission six months post-discharge. The number of professional interpreter sessions correlated positively with FIM gain. CONCLUSIONS Access to professional interpreters in inpatient rehabilitation was variable, with some patients having no or minimal access. These findings provide preliminary evidence that professional interpreter use may be associated with clinical rehabilitation outcomes. Implications for rehabilitationProfessional health care interpreters can be used to overcome language barriers in rehabilitation.In an inpatient rehabilitation setting, professional interpreters appeared to be underutilized, with many patients having no or minimal access to interpreters.Use of ad hoc, untrained interpreters and informal communication strategies was common during rehabilitation.Use of professional interpreters appeared to be associated with favorable rehabilitation outcomes.
               
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