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Release Date: May 7, 2009

Language Barrier Means Later Health Care for Chinese Immigrant Children

By Glenda Fauntleroy, Contributing Writer

Health Behavior News Service

Even when a lack of health insurance is not an issue, many Chinese immigrant parents still face others barriers in getting necessary health care for their sick children, finds a new small study conducted in metropolitan Washington, D.C., where 42 percent of the area’s immigrant families are from Asia.

Language and transportation problems can discourage these parents from seeking care, found researchers led by Z. Jennifer Huang at the Department of International Health at Georgetown University.

The study appears in the May issue of the Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved.

The researchers interviewed 76 families from three different socioeconomic groups, in which both parents were born in China, and spoke Mandarin as their primary language. Twenty families were lower-income from the Washington, D.C., suburbs; 45 were middle-high income from the suburbs; and 11 were lower-income from the District’s Chinatown.

Researchers asked parents were asked whether in the past 12 months there was a time when their child was sick and they did not see a health professional. If they said yes, researchers inquired about the possible reasons, such as lack of insurance, transportation problems or language problems.

Most families had access to either private or public health insurance coverage.

“I was surprised to find out the delayed care is more common in this population, especially the middle-income group,” Huang said. “This prompted us to think of issues beyond the medical insurance when examining the health care access and utilization for recent immigrant families.”

Huang and her colleagues found that most of the parents avoided seeking care because they cannot find a doctor who speaks Chinese or cannot find an interpreter.

“Not many recent immigrant families know they can request translation service at clinics with federal funding,” Huang said.

Allen Fremont, M.D., a natural scientist and sociologist at RAND Corporation in Santa Monica, Calif., said that basic translation services are not always enough.

“In addition to [health plans] knowing that there are a significant number of Chinese immigrants living in a given service area, it is also important that they routinely use readily available data, such as GIS mapping tools and Census data, to determine how immigrant members are distributed between different communities within the market the plans serve,” Fremont said.

He added that plans could then ensure they have enough bilingual Chinese-speaking physicians or sufficient translation services easily accessible where needed.

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FOR MORE INFORMATION
Health Behavior News Service: hbns-editor@cfah.org or (202) 387-2829.

Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved: Contact Editor Virginia M. Brennan at (615) 327-6819 or vbrennan@mmc.edu. Online, visit http://www.press.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_health_care_for_the_poor_and_underserved/

Huang ZJ, et al. Beyond medical insurance: delayed or foregone care among children in Chinese immigrant families. Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved 20(2), 2009.

Supporting Documents

Beyond medical insurance: delayed or foregone care among children in Chinese immigrant families.

Article Discussion

» Siobhan Gallagher, Tufts University 5/8/2009 10:32 AM
Practitioners working with immigrants from China and other Asian countries, and patients from China and other Asian countries, might want to know about a free web resource funded by a grant from the New England Region of the National Network of Libraries of Medicine.

SPIRAL stands for Selected Patient Information Resources in Asian Languages. It is a free web resource that connects patients to authoritative health information in Asian languages. The material is also available in English so that English-speaking practitioners know what health information has been provided.

SPIRAL is maintained by the Tufts University Hirsh Health Sciences Library.

Material is available in seven language: Chinese, Hmong, Cambodian, Japanese, Laotian, Thai and Vietnamese.

http://spiral.tufts.edu/

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