PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Speaking the same language means better health care quality, Wayne State University study finds

2011-01-21
(Press-News.org) DETROIT—Wayne State University researchers have found that when patients and providers speak the same language, patients report less confusion and better health care quality. The findings were based on data from the Pew Hispanic Center/Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Latino Health Survey.

Understanding the relationship between language and health care quality has important public health implications for providing services in an increasingly diverse U.S. population, according to Hector M. González, Ph.D., assistant professor of family medicine and public health at WSU's Institute of Gerontology and School of Medicine. "So often we see that health care providers and researchers blame patients not fluent in English for not adhering to medical prescriptions and treatments when the problem may be that patients simply don't understand the clinician," González said. "Today, there are over 60 million Americans who speak languages other than English and that will rapidly grow in coming years. That's a big market that savvy health care providers should not ignore," he said. The study, led by González, appears in the Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine.

With Latinos expected to comprise more than a third of the U.S. population in the coming decades, practitioners and medical schools need to think about how they want to best serve this changing patient population.

Eliminating disparities in health care is a major priority in the United States, and the Agency for HealthCare Research and Quality has emphasized the importance of removing language barriers to shrink such disparities. "We have the most sophisticated health care system in the world, however, it does little good if patients and providers fail to communicate," González said. "There may be low-tech, perhaps even low-cost ways to improve health care quality that should not be overlooked as health care is transformed to meet the coming health care needs of the nation."

###The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health of the National Institutes of Health and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Network for Multicultural Research on Health and Healthcare. To view the full article, visit http://www.jabfm.org/cgi/content/full/23/6/745?maxtoshow=&hits=10&RESULTFORMAT=&author1=gonzalez&searchid=1&FIRSTINDEX=0&sortspec=relevance&resourcetype=HWCIT.

Wayne State University is one of the nation's pre-eminent public research universities in an urban setting. Through its multidisciplinary approach to research and education, and its ongoing collaboration with government, industry and other institutions, the university seeks to enhance economic growth and improve the quality of life in the city of Detroit, state of Michigan and throughout the world. For more information about research at Wayne State University, visit http://www.research.wayne.edu.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Strong social ties benefit breast cancer patients

2011-01-21
Breast cancer patients who have a strong social support system in the first year after diagnosis are less likely to die or have a recurrence of cancer, according to new research from Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center (VICC) and the Shanghai Institute of Preventive Medicine. The study, led by first author Meira Epplein, Ph.D., assistant professor of Medicine at VICC, was published in a recent edition of the Journal of Clinical Oncology. Patients in the study were enrolled in the Shanghai Breast Cancer Survivor Study, a large, population-based review of female breast cancer ...

Newly discovered group of algae live in both fresh water and ocean

Newly discovered group of algae live in both fresh water and ocean
2011-01-21
A team of biologists has discovered an entirely new group of algae living in a variety of marine and freshwater environments. This group of algae, which the researchers dubbed "rappemonads," have DNA that is distinctly different from that of other known algae. In fact, humans and mushrooms are more closely related to each other than rappemonads are to some other common algae (such as green algae). Based on their DNA analysis, the researchers believe that they have discovered not just a new species or genus, but a potentially large and novel group of microorganisms. The ...

Red blood cell hormone modulates the immune system

2011-01-21
New research reveals that a hormone best known for stimulating the production of red blood cells can modulate the immune response. The study, published by Cell Press in the January 27th issue of the journal Immunity, finds that erythropoietin (EPO) has contrasting influences on infectious and inflammatory diseases and may be useful in the design of new therapeutic strategies. EPO is a cytokine hormone that stimulates the production of red blood cells by acting at EPO receptors (EPORs) on red blood cell precursors. Interestingly, other cell types also express EPORs. ...

Controlling symptoms can lead to improved quality of life for end-of-life patients

2011-01-21
LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Healthcare workers can most directly affect quality of life (QOL) of patients with advanced stage lung cancer by helping manage symptoms such as pain, lack of energy, shortness of breath, coughing, difficulty sleeping and dry mouth, according to a study recently published in the journal Oncology Nursing Forum. Understanding the symptoms, particularly symptom distress - or the degree to which a symptom bothers a person, is crucial to improved patient care. Intervention at the time of diagnosis is important because patients with stage IIIb or IV lung cancer ...

Go figure: Math model may help researchers with stem cell, cancer therapies

2011-01-21
The difficult task of sorting and counting prized stem cells and their cancer-causing cousins has long frustrated scientists looking for new ways to help people who have progressive diseases. But in a development likely to delight math teachers, University of Florida researchers have devised a series of mathematical steps that accomplishes what the most powerful microscopes, high-throughput screening systems and protein assays have failed to do — assess how rapidly stem cells and their malignant, stemlike alter egos increase their numbers. The method, published in the ...

How the hat fits: Structural biology study reveals shape of epigenetic enzyme complex

How the hat fits: Structural biology study reveals shape of epigenetic enzyme complex
2011-01-21
To understand the emerging science of epigenetics—a field that describes how genes may be regulated without altering the underlying DNA itself—scientists are deciphering the many ways in which enzymes act on the proteins surrounding DNA within cells. One type of these enzymes, proteins known as histone acetyltransferases (HATs), act on DNA by modifying DNA-bound proteins called histones. This act of modification, called acetlyation, can dictate how histones interact with DNA and other proteins affecting processes such as DNA replication, transcription (reading the gene), ...

State of the Union 2011: Will President Obama commit to R&D, for jobs and economic growth?

2011-01-21
Research!America's chair, former Congressman John E. Porter (R-IL), and Research!America's CEO, Mary Woolley, issued the following statement in anticipation of President Barack Obama's State of the Union address. Porter said, "I think the president understands that science, technology, innovation and research are where we lead the world and where we must make the ongoing investments to maintain that leadership. But he must, both in his State of the Union speech next Tuesday night and in the Budget he submits to Congress, make the case to both the American people and ...

NASA prepares to launch next Earth-observing satellite mission

NASA prepares to launch next Earth-observing satellite mission
2011-01-21
WASHINGTON -- NASA's newest Earth-observing research mission is nearing launch. The Glory mission will improve our understanding of how the sun and tiny atmospheric particles called aerosols affect Earth's climate. Glory also will extend a legacy of long-term solar measurements needed to address key uncertainties about climate change. Glory is scheduled to launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Feb. 23 at 5:09 a.m. EST. It will join a fleet called the Afternoon Constellation or "A-train" of satellites. This group of other Earth-observing satellites, including ...

Swift survey finds 'missing' active galaxies

Swift survey finds missing active galaxies
2011-01-21
Seen in X-rays, the entire sky is aglow. Even far away from bright sources, X-rays originating from beyond our galaxy provide a steady glow in every direction. Astronomers have long suspected that the chief contributors to this cosmic X-ray background were dust-swaddled black holes at the centers of active galaxies. The trouble was, too few of them were detected to do the job. An international team of scientists using data from NASA's Swift satellite confirms the existence of a largely unseen population of black-hole-powered galaxies. Their X-ray emissions are so heavily ...

Gulf grows between research practice and participant preferences in genetic studies

Gulf grows between research practice and participant preferences in genetic studies
2011-01-21
Obtaining consent for genetic studies can be an opportunity for researchers to foster respectful engagement with participants, not merely to mitigate legal risk. This shift is proposed in a policy forum appearing tomorrow, Jan. 21, in Science, the journal of the American Academy for the Advancement of Science. The authors of the article, "Research Practices and Participant Preferences: The Growing Gulf" recommend new approaches that treat participants as true stakeholders in research, who willingly take on risks because they believe the potential benefits to society ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

How to identify and prevent fraudulent participants in health research

Parents' attachment style may be linked with risk of parental burnout, especially when associated with difficulty in understanding and identifying their emotions

Abnormal repetitive behaviors in mice are associated with oxidative stress

Double disadvantage hurts more than twice as much

Paradox of rotating turbulence finally tamed with world-class ‘hurricane-in-a-lab’

Brain pathway may fuel both aggression, self-harm

Study: Macrophage “bodyguard” disruptors could change breast cancer treatment by helping to overcome endocrine resistance

New study reveals southern ocean’s winter CO₂ outgassing underestimated by 40%

U of A-led team discovers large ritual constructions by early Mesoamericans

MIT study finds targets for a new tuberculosis vaccine

Kono awarded American Physical Society’s Isakson Prize

Scripps Research team identifies sugar molecules that trigger placental formation

ITU at COP30: Driving Green Digital Action for a sustainable future

Want to be more persuasive? Talk with your hands, UBC study finds

Mount Sinai health system to roll out Microsoft Dragon copilot

Scientists map how the brain develops – and how it resolves inflammation

Triggering cell death in metastatic melanoma may pave the way for new cancer treatments

A path to safer painkillers – revealed by freezing opioids and their protein receptors in motion

Reducing reliance on corticosteroids with rituximab: renewed hope for adult-onset patients with relapsing nephrotic syndrome

Psilocybin outside the clinic – public health challenges of increasing publicity, accessibility, and use

Parent-teen sexual health communication and teens’ health information and service seeking

Two small changes, that may transform agriculture

New brain atlas offers unprecedented detail in MRI scans

Two main gene discovery methods reveal complementary aspects of biology

Blocking key protein triggers cancer cell self-destruction

Proposed all-climate battery design could unlock stability in extreme temps

Princeton’s new quantum chip built for scale

High risk of suicide after involuntary psychiatric care

From degradation to restoration: Remote sensing tracks Asia’s struggle for sustainable drylands

Can Israel feed itself? Economic model to rethink food self-sufficiency unveiled

[Press-News.org] Speaking the same language means better health care quality, Wayne State University study finds