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From Ad-Hoc to Best Practices in Healthcare Interpreting Conference July 9, 2009 Wendy Jameson, Director, California Health Care Safety Net Institute The.

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Presentation on theme: "From Ad-Hoc to Best Practices in Healthcare Interpreting Conference July 9, 2009 Wendy Jameson, Director, California Health Care Safety Net Institute The."— Presentation transcript:

1 From Ad-Hoc to Best Practices in Healthcare Interpreting Conference July 9, 2009 Wendy Jameson, Director, California Health Care Safety Net Institute The California Health Care Safety Net Institute: Partnering with Public Hospital Systems to Advance Language Access

2 Progress Since Last Healthcare Interpreting Conference…  Spread of innovation & best practices from a few hospitals (public hosps, Kaiser, & handful of private and academic hosps) to many more  SNI, Kaiser and HCIN playing a critical role in spreading excellent healthcare interpreting practices  CHA & CAPH collaborated in advancing policy, e.g., MCal Reimbursement

3 California Health Care Safety Net Institute  Quality Improvement Partner of the California Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems  2009 marks 10-year anniversary of spreading innovative practices to assure equal access to excellent health care  4 Goals:  Improve Quality of Care Delivered at California Public Hospital Systems  Promote Efficient and Organized Public Hospital System Delivery Models  Eliminate Health Care Disparities  Widely Promote Innovative Practices and Delivery Models Emerging in Public Hospital Systems

4 California’s Public Hospital Systems  19 pub hosp systems in 15 counties (16 county, 3 UC)  Over 200 outpatient primary care and specialty clinics  Located in counties where 81% of Californians live  6% of CA hospitals, yet provide nearly 45% of all hospital care to the uninsured

5 California’s public hospitals serve all, regardless of ability to pay or insurance status  2.5 million patients, 2/3 on Medi-Cal or uninsured  Ethnically diverse:  Nearly 50% Latino  12.5% African American  6.5% Asian  A total of 71% non-white  Over 50% LEP  Multiple, complex conditions; chronic illness; some have extensive psycho-social needs

6 Looking Back…  2002-2003 SNI/CHA Hospital Forum on Language Access With a few exceptions, most hospitals in CA had:  Little awareness of legal, regulatory mandates, and quality issues  Few staff interpreters, reliance on untrained bilingual staff, volunteers and family/friends, limited access to telephonic contract services  Erratic and haphazard practices, vague and ill-defined standards …public hosps were ahead of most CA hospitals overall, but most still had a long way to go.

7 Staff Interpreters at CA Public Hospitals

8 Total Number of Qualified Healthcare Interpretations Per Mo. in CA Public Hospitals 28,089 36,701 54,859

9 Remote Healthcare Interpreting in CA Public Hospital Systems

10 Why Such Progress?  SNI cultural and linguistic competence programs  Synergy between SNI program opportunities and expansion of remote interpreting technology (VMI/HCIN)  Commitment on the part of public hospital language access champions & leadership: “Interpretation services are vital to your institution’s mission. Interpreter services improve patient care and productivity, and remove institutional barriers to care.” -- Ken Cohen, Director, Health Care Services, San Joaquin County  Foundation support: The California Endowment, The California HealthCare Foundation, Kaiser Permanente  CA public hospital systems created “cultural shift”

11 SNI Efforts to Advance Language Access  Published Straight Talk: Model Hospital Policies & Procedures on Language Access  Launched Advancing Public Hospitals Along the Language Access Continuum  Co-conducted (w/UCSF Center for Health Professions) LEADing Organizational Change: Advancing Quality Through Culturally Responsive Care  Supported public hospitals’ efforts to innovate and spread language service delivery (e.g., HCIN, VMI)

12 Evaluation of language access progress in CA pub hosps  Conducted by HRET (Romana Hasnain-Wynia & Julie Yonek), funded by TCE in 2008  Findings:  CA pub hosps had made significant system-level improvements in language access  Key changes included:  Policies and procedures  Commitment articulated in mission statements  Exec sponsorship and specific managerial position  Staff training “…participation in SNI improvement initiatives was a major facilitator for language access advances.”

13 Looking Ahead  Public hospitals continue to be seen as centers of innovation  SNI’s REAL Data Initiative  Capturing accurate, consistent Race/Ethnicity/Language (REAL) data is the foundation for creating equitable health care in --- quality, safety and access  Yet most hospitals struggle with capturing and using meaningful, accurate patient demographic data  SNI is concluding secondary research and interviews with nine public hospitals, one health plan, and several best practice facilities on barriers and facilitators to improved REAL data collection and use -- happy to share findings


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