2021
DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.32207
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Comparison of Access to Primary Care Medical and Dental Appointments Between Simulated Patients Who Were Deaf and Patients Who Could Hear

Abstract: IMPORTANCE Primary medical and dental clinics may accept fewer people who are deaf as patients than persons who can hear, and clinics may deny requests by patients who are deaf for American Sign Language (ASL) interpretation at appointments when necessary, creating diminished access to primary medical and dental care. OBJECTIVE To compare the rate at which patients who are deaf are offered primary care medical or dental appointments with the rate at which appointments are offered to patients who can hear in a … Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…A well-designed study conducted by Schneidewind et al, [ 15 ] simulated DHH patients who needed new appointments in health and dental offices. This study found that, compared to medical offices, dental offices were far more likely to deny appointment requests from new DHH patients because they needed an interpreter to communicate with the dentist, despite the existence of the federal law that requires effective communication in medical and dental offices.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A well-designed study conducted by Schneidewind et al, [ 15 ] simulated DHH patients who needed new appointments in health and dental offices. This study found that, compared to medical offices, dental offices were far more likely to deny appointment requests from new DHH patients because they needed an interpreter to communicate with the dentist, despite the existence of the federal law that requires effective communication in medical and dental offices.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is not surprising that a subset of DHH ASL users with lower education are at higher risk for unmet dental care. Communication breakdowns between the patient and provider risk misdiagnosis and misconceptions regarding a DHH patient's health if accessible communication services are not readily available [ 15 ]. Given the link between communication health and unmet dental needs in our study, dental health professionals and advocates must work together to address the systemic gaps in dental health care and identify strategies to prevent communication barriers that may be associated with missed diagnoses and delayed oral treatments.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…10 For instance, a study found that Deaf men feel less engaged in decision-making regarding prostate-specific antigen screening, 11 and a simulated, cross-sectional audit study found that access of Deaf patients to primary medical and dental care is significantly reduced compared with hearing patients. 12 Another complexity is possible disagreement over the conceptualization of deafness as a disability. In contrast to the medical perspective that views being deaf as a deficit that requires treatment, members of the Deaf community view their condition as a matter of identity and pride.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Estudios realizados en América Latina y Asia señalan que los pacientes sordos han presentado un déficit en la atención estomatológica, tanto del personal que los atiende en la recepción como del mismo odontólogo 4 , 7 . Es importante que el profesional tenga una buena relación con el paciente sordo, empezando por conocer las reglas básicas y aspectos generales para una mejor atención, lo que genera un ambiente cálido y la confianza para conocer más acerca de las dolencias que lo aquejan 3 .…”
Section: Introductionunclassified