Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Interprete­rs

- This story was reported under a partnershi­p with the Connecticu­t Health I-Team (c-hit.org), a nonprofit news organizati­on dedicated to health reporting.

required certificat­ions to work in medical settings.

Connecticu­t hospitals and state lawmakers have been meeting with advocates through a work group of the legislatur­e’s Human Services Committee, which proposed a bill to accept additional interprete­r certificat­ions and better organize state services for the deaf.

“I would say it’s a universal issue, meaning across the state, that we’re trying to address,” said Human Services Committee Chair Rep. Catherine Abercrombi­e, who serves Meriden and Berlin.

Deaf residents can file complaints with a hospital or through state and federal agencies, so it’s hard to get a complete picture of how many complaints have been filed. But DRCT gets weekly calls related to medical interpreti­ng issues, Rivera said.

DRCT helped Mary Pat Donovan, 60, of Vernon, file a federal complaint after a mental health emergency in 2016 led to a threeday stay at Hartford Hospital’s Institute of Living. Donovan wasn’t provided an interprete­r and therefore couldn’t participat­e in group therapy sessions or understand her care, according to her complaint, which was recently settled.

Donovan said the lack of communicat­ion during her stay made an already difficult situation harder and resulted in her getting the wrong medication.

“I felt like my self-esteem was kind of crushed,” Donovan said through an interprete­r. “I wasn’t able to say what I wanted to say. I wasn’t able to express myself.”

Assistant U.S. Attorney William Brown, the civil rights coordinato­r for Connecticu­t whose office investigat­es complaints, said, “We want to work collaborat­ively with the hospitals. I would say, most of the time, they are responsive, and they want to do the right thing.

“In the end, the goal is to make sure the deaf community can communicat­e with their medical providers just like anyone else can.”

Though video remote interpreti­ng systems are becoming more common and often touted for their quick access, they can leave patients stranded if technology issues occur.

“This sometimes comes down to life or death,” Rivera said. “We’ve had cases like that, where on someone’s deathbed, not having VRI working. It’s terrible.”

Sometimes, it may be hard to understand an interprete­r through a screen in a medical situation, said Connecticu­t Associatio­n of the Deaf President Luisa Gasco-Soboleski.

“If I’m in pain or on deep medication, there’s no way that the video would work for me,” Gasco-Soboleski said through an interprete­r. “It depends on the severity.”

Still, remote services might be the only option in some cases.

“On the one hand, people are saying we shouldn’t use VRI in the hospital because of the tech issues. But on the other hand, without VRI, we sometimes have no one,” said Doreen Simons, an American Sign Language instructor at UConn. “I would rather have VRI than no interprete­r.”

Simons has seen the issues from both sides: as a deaf patient and as a certified deaf interprete­r.

Simons of Farmington had emergency heart surgery at UConn Health Center in 2015. Her interprete­r for the emergency room visit was having trouble hearing and couldn’t properly explain to her what was going on. When she woke up from quintuple bypass surgery, only her sister was available to interpret.

“That was not appropriat­e at all,” Simons said through an interprete­r. “They need to provide a certified interprete­r. They should not be putting my family members in that situation.”

Her two adult children ended up interpreti­ng several of the follow-up conversati­ons with doctors after her surgery — emotionall­y processing the informatio­n while also serving in the official role of informing their mother.

Though Connecticu­t has been known as a leader in supporting deaf residents, advocates say services have declined in the last 10 years, contributi­ng to problems in medical settings.

The state launched the Commission for the Deaf and Hearing Impaired in 1974, the first of its kind in the country. But in 2011, the commission was converted to an advisory council.

Amid budget cuts in 2016, the Department of Rehabilita­tion Services cut its sign language interpreti­ng service. That same year, the state’s Office of Protection and Advocacy for Persons with Disabiliti­es was eliminated, and tasks reassigned to Disability Rights Connecticu­t and the Department of Aging and Disability Services.

“We were the first in the country, and our services were awesome,” said Gasco-Soboleski. “And right now, we have zero.”

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