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| Vol.
48, No.
6, June 2003 |
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Agencies
Ill-Prepared as Population Grows
Services in
Spanish Unavailable to Many
Nearly
14 million Spanish-speaking people speak English “less
than very well.”
By John V. O’Neill, MSW, News
Staff
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| Illustration:
John Michael Yanson |
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Many
social workers have seen or heard about Spanish-speaking
clients talking to mental health professionals while their
sensitive stories were being interpreted by their children,
or perhaps by maintenance personnel, because there was
no bilingual, professional staff available.
That sort of treatment is professionally
and ethically questionable, say experts on cultural competence.
And it may be ending soon because of an executive order,
issued first by the Clinton administration and allowed
to stand by the Bush administration, requiring federal
agencies and contractors who receive federal money to provide
professional services in languages clients understand.
In the opinion of experts across
the country in states with Latino populations large and
small, social workers and their agencies are far from prepared.
As the number of Latinos in the United States rapidly grows,
they say, the ability of the social work profession to
provide culturally competent services to them in their
native languages is lagging far behind.
Nobody knows for sure, however,
because nobody on either a national or state level has
collected workforce data on the supply and demand for Spanish-speaking
social workers, say experts in the field. “No funding source
or entity is responsible, so nobody is studying it in a
methodological way,” said Luisa Lopez, NASW affirmative
action manager.
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From June 2003 NASW News. © 2003, National Association of Social Workers. NASW News articles may be copied for personal use, but proper notice of copyright and credit to the NASW News must appear on all copies made. This permission does not apply to reproduction for advertising, promotion, resale, or other commercial purposes.
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