TY - JOUR
T1 - Language Barriers in Medicine in the United States
AU - Woloshin, Steven
AU - Schwartz, Lisa M.
AU - Bickell, Nina A.
AU - Gany, Francesca
AU - Welch, H. Gilbert
PY - 1995/3/1
Y1 - 1995/3/1
N2 - What the scalpel is to the surgeon, words are to the clinician. the conversation between doctor and patient is the heart of the practice of medicine.1The physician-patient relationship is built through communication and the effective use of language. Along with clinical reasoning, observations, and nonverbal cues, skillful use of language endows the history with its clinical power and establishes the medical interview as the clinician’s most powerful tool.2-5Language is the means by which a physician accesses a patient’s beliefs about health and illness,6creating an opportunity to address and reconcile different belief systems. Furthermore, it is through language that physicians and patients achieve an empathic connection that may be therapeutic in itself.7Because of language barriers, millions of US residents cannot have this connection with their physician. According to the 1990 US Census,8almost 14 million people living in the United States do.
AB - What the scalpel is to the surgeon, words are to the clinician. the conversation between doctor and patient is the heart of the practice of medicine.1The physician-patient relationship is built through communication and the effective use of language. Along with clinical reasoning, observations, and nonverbal cues, skillful use of language endows the history with its clinical power and establishes the medical interview as the clinician’s most powerful tool.2-5Language is the means by which a physician accesses a patient’s beliefs about health and illness,6creating an opportunity to address and reconcile different belief systems. Furthermore, it is through language that physicians and patients achieve an empathic connection that may be therapeutic in itself.7Because of language barriers, millions of US residents cannot have this connection with their physician. According to the 1990 US Census,8almost 14 million people living in the United States do.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0028909781
U2 - 10.1001/jama.1995.03520330054037
DO - 10.1001/jama.1995.03520330054037
M3 - Article
C2 - 7853631
AN - SCOPUS:0028909781
SN - 0098-7484
VL - 273
SP - 724
EP - 728
JO - JAMA - Journal of the American Medical Association
JF - JAMA - Journal of the American Medical Association
IS - 9
ER -