Evaluation of Disparities in Emergency Department Admission and Wait Times for Non-English Preferred Patients
John Wong-Castillo, Daniel Berger, Juan Carlos Montoy, Riham Alwan

TL;DR
Non-English speaking patients face longer wait times and higher admission rates in the emergency department, especially for less urgent cases.
Contribution
This study evaluates disparities in ED admission and wait times for NELP patients, including multiple non-Spanish languages and adjusting for acuity.
Findings
Spanish and Chinese language-preferred patients had 16% and 14% higher odds of admission, respectively, compared to English speakers.
Non-English speakers waited 5.4 minutes longer to be roomed and 15.6 minutes longer until disposition.
Lower acuity NELP patients experienced significantly longer wait times, with Chinese speakers waiting up to 90.6 minutes longer than ELP patients.
Abstract
Patients who prefer to communicate in a language other than English are vulnerable to the consequences of medical communication barriers. Studies of non-English language preferred (NELP) and English language preferred (ELP) patients have shown differences in rates of hospital admission and wait times—factors known to be related to increased costs and lower patient satisfaction. However, few studies include languages other than Spanish or account for patient acuity level. We performed a retrospective cohort study at an urban, Level I trauma center from January–December 2020. Patients were grouped by language preference, with NELP languages grouped into three categories: Spanish; Chinese (Mandarin, Cantonese, Taishanese, Taiwanese, and Zhongshan-Chinese dialect); and other (all other remaining languages). We extracted age, sex, race, ethnicity, language preference, emergency department…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInterpreting and Communication in Healthcare
