In Unequal Treatment:
Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities, Smedley et al talk about the racial and ethnic disparities in healthcare,
and how these reflect access to health care independent of insurance or
socioeconomic status of the patient.
As medical students, health care providers, we have been
there. When we have a non-English speaking patient, our H&Ps are a little
bit shorter, our questions are less elaborate and even when using a translator
service there are gaps in the information we get from the patient. But how do
we change this? How can we better help our patients? Unequal
Treatment brings a good start, and is an easily accessible text. It discusses different recommendations for
health care providers, research initiatives and other information that would be
beneficial for everyone in health care, because we are all bound to encounter
patients who speak a language other than our own, and we want to be able to
treat these patients to the best of our abilities.
Maria Soledad Menchaca
DUCOM 2019
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