Breakout Room 4 Notes

Language Access Work Group

Notes from 

Meeting 3 Breakout Room 4

August 22, 2023


Breakout Room 4 Participants                                       Breakout Room 4 Facilitator

Larysa House                                                                        Morgan Olson

Theresa Powell

Joana Ramos

Sandy Yang

 

Homework: Please share what would you like to see in a draft recommendation, or what have you already shared in a draft recommendation, regarding the first two main components of the Preliminary Elements of Medical Interpreter Testing and Certification information sheet: testing entities and technology.

 

  • Have valid, accredited tests. This will uphold a baseline for all interpreters who are getting certified.

  • Prerequisites courses are often put in the continuing education portion, not in a separate academic section for medical interpreters to have their own pathway to the workforce.

  • Contract with community colleges for resources like labs, computer rooms, technology, proctoring.

  • Accessible test centers: location, time, and individuals there to support.

  • Workforce equity issue: accessibility and resources to succeed.

  • Medical interpretation needs additional knowledge and terminology courses.

  • Community colleges could offer prerequisites and courses.

  • Revise and add prerequisites for testing so that more people can pass the exam.

  • There needs to be a certificate medical interpreter pathway (consider community college option) – connected to medical education and cultural education.

  • For medical interpretation, take a medical course as a prerequisite alongside interpretation.

  • Technology in general is a barrier; the in-person element provides accessibility for more people.

  • Provide a link or site for people to volunteer/offer to be a proctor; a barrier is that they have to be contracted and screened.

  • The healthcare system must be more fully invested because it effects so much of this population.

  • Look at Massachusetts for recommendations on medical interpreters and programs.

  • Walla Walla Community College designed a program for Spanish interpreters but lacked funding and ended.