Each week, LanguageLine(R) selects five stories about language and culture that we think readers will find intriguing. Here is this week’s “Liner Notes”:
By the time today’s teenagers hit their 30s, there will be more minorities than whites living in the United States, according to a statistical compilation published by Axios.
According to the report, the demographic shifts we have seen will achieve a tipping point in the 2040s, at which point the country will be older than it is today, as well as “majority minority.”
Among the statistics reported:
(From Axios. Read more)
What is the Meaning of “Cultural Sensitivity”?
Every patient and every provider have a unique story.
Cultural sensitivity, at a basic level, recognizes that people are different, without assigning any value to those differences. A culturally-competent healthcare provider understands that a person’s unique experiences, beliefs, values, background, and language all play a role in how patients perceive their healthcare service delivery, diagnosis, and recommended treatment.
“The person in front of us is not like us, so there’s a disconnect — especially if it’s someone who may look different from you, speak different from you, or have different beliefs,” says Lisette Martinez, MBA, Chief Diversity and Inclusion Officer at Yale New Haven Health.
(From National Healthcareer Association. Read more.)
Report: Future of Work May Depend on Language Skills
A survey conducted by American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL), found that nine out of 10 U.S. employers report a reliance on U.S.-based employees with language skills other than English, and a third of those state they have a high dependency on bilingual employees. Moreover, demand is on a sustained rise, with a majority of employers reporting their need for foreign languages has increased over the past five years and projecting it will continue to grow.
English remains the most widely used global language of business, but almost one in four employers surveyed acknowledge losing or being unable to pursue a business opportunity over the singular lack of language skills. That figure increases to 51 percent for those who say they have a language skills gap.
(From Higher Ed Dive. Read more.)
Watch: Gorgeous Animated Short Films Celebrate Mexico’s Indigenous Languages
As one of the world’s most linguistically diverse nations, Mexico is also ground zero for language extinction as grandparents and great-grandparents pass away, and younger generations assimilate. Mexico still manages to encompass 364 indigenous dialects, belonging to 68 distinct languages which branch off from 11 language families.
Some are working not only to preserve these languages for future generations, but to empower those who speak them right now. Sesenta y Ocho Voces, Sesenta y Ocho Corazones (also known as 68 voces), is an initiative from Mexico’s government Fund for The Culture and Arts (FONCA) that seeks to elevate Mexico’s 68 indigenous languages by preserving their myths, legends, poems, and stories in the form of beautifully animated short films.
There are currently 11 of these short, animated films available, covering dialects of the Huasteco, Maya, Mixteco, Náhuatl, Totonaco, Yaqui, and Zapoteco languages.
(From Remezcla. Watch the films here.)
Empathy in Healthcare Is Making a Comeback
The high value now placed on good empathic communication in medicine is relatively new. Until the 1970s, the doctor-patient relationship was often paternalistic.
Researchers quantified the effects of therapeutic empathy the same way drug effects are quantified. More and more carefully controlled trials are comparing what happens with healthcare practitioners who practice empathic, positive communication with those who carry on as usual. The results are overwhelmingly encouraging, with empathic and positive communication improving conditions ranging from lung function and length of hospital stay, to pain, patient satisfaction and quality of life. There is even evidence that it makes the common cold go away faster.
Language access for the limited English proficient, Deaf, and Hard of Hearing is a component of empathetic care.
(From The Conversation. Read more.)
LanguageLine Can Help
We believe that being understood is empowering. For more than four decades, LanguageLine has worked with healthcare organizations, government agencies, and businesses to overcome language and cultural hurdles. Please contact us so that we can learn more about you and the particular challenge you are facing.