International Medical Interpreters Association Publishes Guide to Medical Translations
Posted on: Thursday, 8 January 2009, 06:50 CST
"Hospitals and health care facilities throughout the world struggle to provide patients with translated patient materials," explained
Medical translations had until now been mostly for critical trials or pharmaceutical clients. To develop the guide, the association enlisted Rocio Txabarriaga, an experienced translation and localization professional, author and educator. "The most common misconception among health care providers is that anyone with language fluency can perform or evaluate translations," says Txabarriaga.
"In the US alone, hospital-based translations generate critical documents that provide priceless information to LEP patients, and at the same time safeguarding hospitals from losing hundreds of million of dollars in litigation," says
About the IMIA
The International Medical Interpreters Association (IMIA) is committed to the advancement of professional medical interpreters as the best practice for equitable language access to health care for linguistically diverse patients worldwide. Founded in 1986, it is comprised of over 1,600 members, and is the oldest and largest medical interpreter association in the world. While representing medical interpreters as the ultimate experts in the medical interpreting field, associate membership to the IMIA is open to multidisciplinary groups interested in medical interpreting and language access in health care, an international human right. IMIA has divisions of providers, corporate members, trainers and interpreters in over 100 languages. (http://www.imiaweb.org)
Contact: Abbott Thayer athayer@imiaweb.orgThis release was issued through eReleases(TM). For more information, visit http://www.ereleases.com.
SOURCE International Medical Interpreters Association
Source: PR Newswire
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