Title: CLAS Standards Applied to a Community Health Center Setting
1CLAS Standards Applied to a Community Health
Center Setting
- Lowell Community Health Center Our Mission
- To provide caring, quality, and culturally
appropriate health services to the people of
Greater Lowell, regardless of their financial
status. - To enhance the health of our community and to
empower each individual to maximize overall well
being. - Our Motto
- LCHC
- Linking Community
- to Health Care
- - CLAS Std. 8 -
2Why Focus on Cultural LinguisticCompetence?
- Lowell Population -
- 105,000, 2nd largest
- Cambodian population
- in U.S. at 25,000 17
- Latino 7 African immigrant
- 7 Portuguese speaking
- Lowell Community Health Center serves 24,000
people annually with medical care, complementary
medicine, behavioral health care, and public
health promotion. 60 are persons best served in
a language other than English.
3How Could We NOT Focus on Cultural Competence??
43 Major Themes
- Culturally Competent Care
- Standards 1-3 (Recommended)
- Language Access Services
- Standards 4-7 (Required)
- 3. Organizational Supports
- Standards 8-14
5What is Cultural Competence?
a set of congruent behaviors, attitudes, and
policies that come together in a system or agency
or among professionals that enable effective
interactions in a cross-cultural framework.
Georgetown University Child Development Center
6In a nut shell
- Cultural Competence is the ability to function
effectively in the context of cultural
differences
7Standards 2 3
- 2 Implement strategies to recruit, retain, and
promote at all levels of the organization a
diverse staff leadership representative of the
demographics of the service area. - 3 Ensure that staff at all levels and
disciplines receive ongoing education and
training in culturally linguistically
appropriate service delivery -
8STD. 2 StaffingLCHC Response
- Decision to hire bilingual, bicultural staff in
open positions, over 50 of staff complicated
by the large number of countries, languages, and
cultures represented in the patient population - Targeted staff recruitment through associations,
CBOs, community leaders mailings - On the job training where needed when there may
not be many candidates who have a certain type of
experience - - CLAS Std. 2 -
9- STD. 3 Cultural Competence TrainingLCHC
Response - A staff person received training, along with AAC
staff and MAPS staff, to be a trainer in cultural
competence - Cultural competence training for all staff
through new staff orientation and annual
orientation required for all staff PLUS specific
education about specific cultures and beliefs in
individual departments and helping staff to
understand the fears of undocumented immigrants,
for example - - CLAS Std. 3 -
10Standard 4
- Health care organizations must offer and
provide language assistance services, including
bilingual staff and interpreter services, at no
cost to each patient/consumer with limited
English proficiency at all points of contact,
in a timely manner during all hours of operation.
11LASIT
- Language Access Systems Improvement Team
- Offer medical interpreter training and financial
incentives - Set up contract arrangement with CBOs - AAC, MAPS
- to provide interpreting, ATT language line
availability - Increased the number of staff trained for medical
interpreting - Over 50 of our staff is bilingual and bicultural
- Language classes on site
- - CLAS Std. 4-6 -
12LASIT
- On-going registration staff training on Asking
the Question regarding race, ethnicity and
interpreter need - Secured funding through Blue Cross Blue Shield
Foundation of Massachusetts to develop
interpreter training assessment program - Developing Promotoras de Salud Training on
cross-cultural communication skills between
patient, provider and interpreter - - CLAS Std. 4-6 -
13To improve our patient registration process
LASIT To improve access to interpreter services
within the health center in order to improve
patients health
To improve the scheduling of interpreters
To ensure that sites are complying with the
interpreter policy
To use formally trained interpreters
14Standard 5
- Health Care organizations must provide to
patients/consumers in their preferred language
both verbal offers and written notices informing
them of their right to receive language
assistance services.
15Std. 5 Written materialsLCHC Response
- Developed new signage in many languages for five
entrances to two buildings - Developed new materials about accessing health
care in Portuguese, French and Swahili
16Standard 6
- Health Care organizations must assure that
competence of language assistance provided to
limited English proficient patients/consumers
by interpreters and bilingual staff. Family
and friends should not be used to provide
interpretation services (except on request by
the patient/consumer).
17Std. 6 Interpreter Competence LCHC Response
- Language Proficiency Testing is required to be a
participant in Interpreter Training programs - Develop LCHC verbal language proficiency testing
for all health care providers and support staff
who self-declare as bilingual - Developed Medical Interpreter Policy
- Formed a Language Access Improvement Team
- Created interpreter lists to be placed at
clinical areas for easier accessibility for
providers
18Standard 7
- Patient-related materials and signage in
languages of commonly encountered groups in the
service area
19The Environment of Services
- Signage at all sites including English, Spanish,
Portuguese, Khmer, Laotian, Swahili, and French - Art work, world maps pictures from various
cultures in clinical areas,
20Standards 10, 11, 12
- 10 Ensure that data on patients race,
ethnicity, and spoken and written language are in
health records, integrated into MIS,
periodically updated - 11 Maintain current demographic, cultural,
epidemiological community profile as well as a - needs assessment to accurately plan for
implement services that respond to cultural,
linguistic characteristics of service area - 12 Develop participatory, collaborative
community partnerships facilitate community
consumer involvement in designing implementing
CLAS activities
21Community Input
- Patient Advisory
- or focus groups with
- African, SEA, and Spanish/
- Portuguese speaking
- patients to learn about their barriers
- to care, needs, expectations and,
- through CBOs - focus groups with other community
members - Input from African, SEA, and Spanish and
Portuguese speaking staff - Partnering with ethnic-specific CBOs, sharing
funding - - CLAS Std. 11 12 -
22Board and Senior Staff Support
- Governing Board members represent communities
served, consumer majority - Senior staff expect cultural competence
development throughout the center hiring of
bilingual, bicultural staff - - CLAS Std. 11 12 -
23Internal External Data Issues
- Asking the Questions
- Practice management system
- Brazilians
- Language vs Race/Ethnicity
- Lumping data issue
24Our First Major Effort Metta Health Center
- LCHC Metta Health Center Integrates mental,
spiritual, and physical health services through
Southeast Asian and western treatment - 1999 2000 Planning
25Reasons for Starting a New Center to Focus on
Southeast Asians
- 30,000 Southeast Asians in Lowell (25,000 Khmer,
5000 Lao, 1,500 Vietnamese) over 2000 increase
1980-90 - Only 1,600 used LCHC
- Many barriers to care
- for SEAs in Lowell
- Tremendous health
- mental health needs
26Metta Model and Services
- Integration of mental, physical, and spiritual
health services - Integration of SEA and western approaches
- Many gateways to service
- Focus on decreasing stigma of mental health care
- Staffed directed by SEAs (Std. 2)
- Tri-lingual signage, materials, interpreting
(Stds. 4, 5, 6, 7) - Cross-cultural cross-disciplinary staff
training (Std. 3) - Based on focus groups, interviews, needs
assessment, data SEA Advisory Board (Stds. 8,
11, 12)
27Spread to Other Sites Communities
- Attending to changing demographics - Applying
lessons learned from Metta Health Center to
Latino, Brazilian, and African immigrant
communities - Partnering (sharing funding) with ethnic-specific
CBOs - New patient and community advisory groups
- Faith leader partnerships
28Community Outreach
- Health Promotion
- Director
- Outreach includes
- LCHC staff and AAC/MAPS/
- CMAA staff going to temples,
- churches, community events
- - Outreach Works!
- Visiting pastors, informing
- people about how to access health services,
resources - available, and issues such as payment for health
services - Sponsoring African, Brazilian, Cambodian, Latino
community events and putting ads in programs - Connecting with newly arriving African,
Cambodian, other refugees through provision of
Refugee Health Assessments
29Funding
- Obviously critical. As we have learned more
about what the key issues are, we have worked
with staff, patients, and organizations such as
AAC to write grants to fund the joint ideas. For
example, federal CHC grant funds outreach, state
and federal grants fund HIV work, and federal and
United Nations grant funds community education
about results of torture and trauma as well as
mental health services.
30Thank you.
www.lchealth.orgdorcasgr_at_lchealth.org
sheilaoc_at_lchealth.org