Published Feb 12, 2006
LilPeanut, MSN, RN, NP
898 Posts
approx. does your NICU see in a month?
I'm putting out feelers for a possible Master's Thesis, and it would be looking at how language barriers affect bonding and or perceptions of care on both sides of the fence.
fergus51
6,620 Posts
I'd say at least 1/3 of our patients have something other than english as their primary language, if not more. I live in Southern California, so spanish is the biggie but we also see families who speak Laotian, Cambodian, Chinese, Punjabi... the list goes on.
When I worked in Toronto, I would say the numbers were even higher with a much more diverse language group too. There were a few times that I had never even known a language existed until I met a family at work who listed it as their primary language (Urdu for example).
TiffyRN, BSN, PhD
2,315 Posts
I would say something like 1/4 to 1/3 of the parents are non-native English speakers. It's not that common that they can't speak English at all. We have a large Hispanic population in Texas but we see many other nationalities.
Our hospital recently expanded their Spanish translation services a whole lot. Of course it's not uncommon in this area to have translators on during the day but for the first time we have them on nights for a few hours. Most nights we have them until at least 9pm, sometimes until 11pm. I have used them many times and they are really great.
Our unit has an average census of about 50-55 and I would say that at any given time there are 2-3 sets of parents that do not speak English well. Ironically enough in this area with such a large Spanish-speaking population we have very few Spanish-speaking nurses or other personnel.
prmenrs, RN
4,565 Posts
@ my current job, I'd say 80% or greater. My old one, probably 60%. Of those 95% speak Spanish, about 1/2 of those have some English skills. I'm happy if it's just Spanish--when it gets into Chinese, etc., it's so much more difficult--we're more familiar w/that culture and, of course, it's a little easier to communicate as we're more likely to speak @ least a little Spanish (Spanglish?).