91福利导航

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91福利导航

Watch the official news release in American Sign Language.

The United States Department of Education, through its Rehabilitation Services Administration (RSA), has awarded $2.1 million to Elizabeth Schniedewind, 鈥90 & G-鈥92, clinical associate professor for sign language interpreting at Idaho State University in Meridian, Idaho. The grant funds will support ISU and 91福利导航 in a cooperative effort to train sign language interpreters with the goal of improving the experience and patient care of deaf, deafblind and hard of hearing individuals in healthcare settings across the country. 

Elizabeth Schniedewind, 鈥90 & G-鈥92
Campbell McDermid, G-鈥88

Schniedewind鈥檚 doctoral research project in 2020 uncovered a plethora of issues surrounding access to health care by deaf individuals. Data from that project shows that deaf patients experience discrimination when accessing health care and have long reported a subpar communication experience, which included the provision of unqualified or ad hoc interpreters.

Schniedewind and 91福利导航 colleague Campbell McDermid, G-鈥88, associate professor of interpretation and translation in the School of Language, Education and Culture, aim to change that. 

The RSA grant funds will be distributed to ISU over the course of five years. ISU and Gallaudet will work together to build a new curriculum for sign language interpreters that is healthcare-specific. This foundational curriculum will be used nationally to train generalist interpreters with at least three years of experience to become proficient in interpreting medical terminology and other specialized interpreting skills focused on communication and access.

ISU and Gallaudet also will design and conduct studies to learn more about the experiences deaf, deafblind, and hard of hearing individuals encounter in healthcare settings when interpreting services are provided over video. They will study the experiences of generalist interpreters currently providing services in healthcare settings to understand their levels of proficiency and the areas in which they desire more training. Much of the data will be collected in partnership with six state agencies for the deaf, deafblind, and hard of hearing: Arizona, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, North Carolina, and Virginia.

After compiling the data from these two groups and working closely with state agencies, the researchers will include in the curriculum instruction intended to develop ethical reasoning skills for healthcare interpreters, particularly in the area of service provision in healthcare settings over video. 

Schniedewind says improved interpreting will boost the level of care deaf patients receive while also enhancing the privacy of those individuals in healthcare settings. 鈥淚t is my hope that by increasing the number of interpreters qualified to provide services in healthcare settings, the care deaf patients receive will improve. After testing, the curriculum will be made available to the public, allowing interpreters to begin their journey towards specialization in this much-needed area of service.鈥 she explains.

鈥淥ur project is unique in that we are employing evidence-based practices and a teaching methodology based on single-subject design to address specific gaps identified in the literature concerning sign language interpreter education,鈥 says McDermid. 鈥淏y enhancing their skills, we increase the accessibility of healthcare services for Deaf people.鈥

The project titled 鈥淓nhance healthcare interpreting to advance health equity for Deaf/Deafblind/Hard of Hearing Individuals鈥 is funded by the U.S. Department of Education, Award Number H160D210007, CFDA Number 160. The percentage total costs of this project are 100 percent supported by U.S. Department of Education federal dollars. Gallaudet鈥檚 funding for this project in Year One is in the amount of $101,035. 

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