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MODESTO BEE
ORIGINAL
ARTICLE
By TIM MORAN
BEE STAFF WRITER
Last Updated: October 15, 2005, 04:58:59 AM PDT
More than 1 in 5 women giving birth in California either don't speak
English well or don't speak it at all, according to new information from
the U.S. Census Bureau.
More than a third of the women giving birth in the state are not citizens,
according to the American Community Survey done by the Census Bureau.
The information isn't broken down by county, but area hospitals say they
hear several different languages from patients, and have programs in place
to deal with translation issues.
The survey showed that California by far leads the nation in the maternity
language barrier, with 20.6 percent of women giving birth not speaking
English or not speaking it well. The next highest states were Texas and
Arizona at 14.4 percent each.
The national average is 8.2 percent, according to the survey. The numbers
are a four-year annual average from 2000 to 2003.
Stanislaus County health authorities don't keep statistics on languages
spoken by patients, but about 35 percent of the women giving birth in
the county over those same years were not born in the United States, according
to the Health Services Agency.
"I think over the last few years we've been cognizant of the fact
that we have a large number of non-English speaking residents," said
Cleopathia Moore, associate director of the Health Services Agency.
"We have to gear up to meet their health care needs. How do we educate
them and have more language capabilities in our health care services?"
she asked.
The area's hospitals are working to meet that need and say the language
barrier has not posed big problems.
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