Language impeding Hispanics' health care
Daniel Yee Associated PressATLANTA -- Language barriers are keeping the South's rapidly growing Hispanic communities from getting much-needed medical care and more interpreters are needed in the health care system, Hispanic organizations said Friday.
Limited English skills and the lack of Spanish-speaking health workers have prevented many Hispanic patients from seeking appropriate medical care, according to a survey released Friday by the National Council of La Raza.
The reluctance of Hispanics to seek or even trust the health-care system in the South is similar to that in other parts of the country, experts say. But the difference in the South is that the Hispanic population has exploded so quickly that health services have yet to catch up.
"We want to make sure these emerging Latino communities get support," said Janet Murguia, executive director of La Raza, a Hispanic civil rights organization.
In Georgia, Hispanics were nearly 2 percent of the population in 1990 and grew to more than 5 percent by 2000. Atlanta's Hispanic population has grown 30 percent and Nashville's has grown by 21 percent during the same period, the organization said.
The survey, which interviewed Hispanic residents and health providers in Georgia, North Carolina and Tennessee -- the states with the largest recent growth of Hispanics -- found that Hispanic communities have very limited sources of health information.
Spanish radio programs with "doctores" -- who promote unregulated health remedies -- can be a community's only source of health information, said Andrea Bazan Manson of the North Carolina-based El Pueblo, which serves Hispanic communities.
Health departments need more campaigns to educate Hispanics about health issues and medical schools should offer courses so doctors can better understand the Hispanic culture, the organization said.
On the Net: National Council of La Raza: www.nclr.org
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