Title: Medical Interpreting: Outcomes, Errors, and Understanding
1Medical Interpreting Outcomes, Errors, and
Understanding
- The Center for Immigrant Health
- New York University School of Medicine
-
2Thanks!
- UHF
- Altman
- New York Community Trust
- Commonwealth Fund
- California Endowment
3The Center for Immigrant Health NYU School of
Medicine
- Founded in 1989
- Network of community members/CBOs/FBOs,
providers, researchers, facilities and
administrators, program and policymakers - Mission To facilitate the delivery of
linguistically, culturally, and epidemiologically
sensitive healthcare services to newcomer
populations to reduce health disparities - Research, Education, Program/Policy Dvpt
4PARTNERS
5Linguistic Diversity United States
- 1990 Census
- 31 million spoke a language other than English
- 14 million considered limited English proficient
- 2000 Census
- 47 million speak a language other than English
- 21 million considered limited English proficient
6 LEP Change by State
Source Access Project National Health Law
Program
7Proportion of NYC Immigrant Population that is LEP
Source New York City Department of Planning
8 Study Series A Series of Firsts
- Randomized study impact of MI modes upon medical
outcomes and costs - Comparative study of accuracy
- Determination of efficiencies across modalities
9InterventionRemote Simultaneous Medical
Interpreting System(RSMI)
- Trained Simultaneous Medical Interpreters
- Remotely Located, Pooled Resource
- Spanish, Mandarin, Cantonese, Bengla
10Research Questions
- Does RSMI Improve Timely Diagnosis of Depression?
- Does RSMI Facilitate Appropriate Follow-up Care?
11Research Questions
- Does RSMI Improve Adherence to Screening
Guidelines? - Does RSMI Improve Outcomes for Chronic Diseases?
- Diabetes, Hypertension, and Hypercholesterolemi
a
12Research Questions
- Does RSMI lead to fewer interpreting errors?
- Is RSMI a more efficient form of interpreting?
- Does RSMI lead to improved understanding of exit
instructions
13Cost Analysis Research Questions Pending
- Are visit lengths different across different
modalities? - Are there fewer repeat visits to achieve the same
outcomes? - Are there differences in test ordering behaviors,
hence, costs? - What are the opportunity costs vis-a-vis staff
time? - Hospitalizations/ER visits prevented
14Error Analysis and Efficiency
- Scripted Encounters
- Spanish and Chinese TB, Menopause, Diabetes,
Depression - Bengali Breast Cancer
- RSMI, Proximate Consecutive, Over-the- telephone
Consecutive, Ad Hoc - Patient/Doctor Actors
- Encounters Audiotaped and Transcribed
15Error Analysis Tool
- Word-by-word, and by concept
- Linguistic errors meaningful and non-meaningful
- Medical errors no, mild, moderate, high, and
life-threatening significance - HPI, meds/allergies, family history, diagnosis,
plan, psychosocial, F/U, patient education
16Error Analysis Panel
- Linguist and 3 physicians, at least 2 bilingual
- Scored separately, then discussed differences
until consensus
17Error Analysis
- Error rate per utterance
- Medically significant/Category
- Time
- Control for training
18Spanish Error Analysis
- RSMI versus non-RSMI
- RSMI 30 as likely to result in potential
medical error - plt0.05
19Spanish Error Analysis Odds Ratio of a
moderately significant to life-threatening error
- Trained Proximate Consecutive
- Trained Remote Consecutive
- Ad Hoc(18 yrs experience)
- Trained Remote Simultaneous
-
- 6.3
- 7.54
- 1.71
- 1.00
- plt0.001
20Error Analysis Efficiency Results
Mean time (in seconds) for each group
21Spanish Efficiency
- RSMI is 30 faster than the next fastest
mode(ad hoc) - RSMI two times faster than over-the-phone
consecutive - Spanish encounters more accurate and efficient
with RSMI
22Different Languages May be Different
- Mandarin Analyses in Progress
23Bengali Error Analysis
- Standardized Training
-
- Standardized Practice
-
- One Script Across All Modes
-
24Results/BengaliTraining
25Training Matters
- 27 of errors made by untrained interpreters were
of moderate or greater clinical significance vs.
8.5 of errors made by trained interpreters - Vocabulary precision rate .69 for trained vs.
0.34 for the untrained
26Training Error Examples
- Dr The results were positive which means that
you carry the gene that puts you at risk for
developing breast cancer - Int The results were correct
- Dr One important thing that you have going for
you is the fact that the cancer has probably been
caught early - Int One important thing is the fact that the
cancer is working quickly in your body - Dr The doxy could hurt your heart
- Int The doxy can give you pain
27Study Design Outcomes
- Randomized Control for Discordant(Spanish-English,
Mandarin-English, Cantonese-English) - RSMI
- Usual and Customary
- Language Concordant Encounters English-English,
Spanish-Spanish, Chinese-Chinese
28Data CollectionDepression, Medical
Outcomes,Knowledge
- Clinic
- Intake Questionnaire, including Beck Depression
Index - Chart Reviews and Computerized Tracking for 1
Year after Enrollment - Exit Interviews
- Several Hundred Enrolled
- ER
- Intake Questionnaire
- Audiotaped Visits
- Exit Interviews
- Patient Understanding Scale
29Clinic Population
- 782 patients enrolled
- RSMI and UC comparable in demographics including
- age, gender, education, years in U.S., primary
language, English proficiency, acculturation, and
self-reported health status
30Randomization Assignment and Exposure Group
31Spanish-speaking Clinic Study Patients, n465
Age
Gender
Country of Origin
n
Years in the U.S
n282
32Chinese-speaking Study Patients, n208
Age
Gender
.
Years in the U.S
33Spanish-speaking ER Patients, n225
Age
Gender
Country of Origin
Length of Stay in U.S.
34Immigrants at Risk Language and Influenza
Vaccination
- 462 patients were enrolled in the study between
November 2003 and July 2004 - 102 were at the highest risk of complications
from influenza (chronic medical condition, age,
or pregnancy) - Only 10 patients in this group were referred for
vaccination - 9 received vaccination
- 54 patients aged 50 to 64 years without
underlying medical conditions composed a second
group who were eligible - 4 in this group were referred for and
received flu vaccination - None of the Cantonese or Mandarin-speaking
patients in either group received vaccination.
35CLEAN
- RSMI associated with a higher referral rate for
screening colonoscopy (OR of 1.7) compared with
UC - Physicians in language concordant encounters
had lower rates of referrals for screening
colonoscopy than language discordant
36Instructions Given
- Audiotape analyses of 214 ER Spanish language
encounters Spanish language concordant, RSMI, UC - Trained RSMI
- mean instructions per encounter 14.29,std
dv 6.9 equal to Spanish language concordant - (14.33, std dev 6.33)
- Usual and customary interpreting
- significantly fewer instructions mean
11.9, std dev 6.17
37Diabetes Management
- Research question Does RSMI lead to improved
management of diabetes mellitus? - 74 patients with DM
- Young patient population at clinic
- Guidelines for DM management as per the American
Diabetes Association (ADA)
38Methodology
- Score computed based on ADA guidelines
considering following - A1C 1st visit Podiatry referral
- A1C 3 months later Eye doc referral
- BP recorded Nutrition referral
- LDL ordered Flu shot referral
- Weight recorded Pneumovax referral
- Urine spot or 24h ordered
- Smoking cessation referral (if eligible)
- Prescribed aspirin (if eligible)
39Results
40Diagnosis of Depression
- Research question Does RSMI Improve Timely
Diagnosis of Depression? - Why depression?
- Common disorder in the primary care setting
- Associated with significant morbidity
- Effective communication is key in diagnosis
41Methodology
- Becks Depression Inventory
- Validated in Spanish and Chinese
- Screening tool
- Administered to patients at intake by research
assistant - BDI score of 4 or more considered as positive
- RSMI, UC, LC compared in terms of rate of
diagnosis by physicians and matched against the
expected rate from the BDI score
42Results
- BDI ve rates
- BDI ve 153
- BDI -ve 309
- BDI not done 320
- intake process, BDI at end of interview
- Demographics comparable in BDI ve, -ve, and not
done - Significant trends observed
- Diagnosis rate best in LC, followed by RSMI and
then UC - Time to medication in new diagnosis of depression
better in RSMI compared with UC
43 Randomization Comparing all 3 groups
Chi-square P0.66, Fisher P0.65 Comparing
RSMI vs UC Chi-square P0.41, Fisher P0.47
Exposure Comparing all 3 groups
Chi-square P0.83, Fisher P0.85
Comparing RSMI vs UC Chi-square P0.58, Fisher
P0.76
44Patient Satisfaction/Understanding Perception
- ER and Clinic Combined
- First Visits
- Language Concordant(E-E,Sp-Sp, M-M, Ca-Ca), RSMI,
Usual and Customary
45 Understanding MD
Understands Pt Underst Explan Pt
Under Instructions
46Satisfaction
- How would you rate the MD overall?
- LC RSMI UC
- Ex 63 56 49
- Gd 32 40 44
- Fa 4 4 4
- How satisfied with care overall?
- LC RSMI UC
- Very 57 57 47
- Swht 38 40 48
- SwtDis 4 3 5
47How well did the method protect your privacy?
- RSMI UC
- Very Well 49 40
- Well 44 49
- Not Well 7 10
- Poor 0 1
48No Difference
- How well did the interpreter understand you?
- Did the interpreter listen carefully(yes/no)?
- Did the interpreter treat you with
respect?(trend) - How well did the interpreter interpret?(trend)
49Training matters.training programs should be
systematized. Investment in dissemination of
RSMI to users of telephone interpreting services
will provide cost savings even without
consideration of seemingly improved
outcomes(?). For Spanish-language encounters,
RSMI will likely provide the most accurate
results, and better patient outcomes. First ever
randomized trial of impact of varying modes of
interpreting. Results can provide basis for
institutional and federal/state/local policy
evidence-based decision-making.