How Do I Communicate with Doctors, Nurses, and Staff at the Hospital During COVID-19?

During the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, how will you be able to talk to doctors, nurses and others at the hospital? This guide is to help you get ready for your hospital visit. 

Going to the hospital will be very different during the pandemic. 

In normal times, hospitals must give services that help you understand what is being said and are supposed to ask you what services you need. This might include in-person sign language interpreters, Video Remote Interpreting (VRI), lip-reading, written communications, hand-held amplification devices, captioning or CART, or speech-to-text apps.

Now, during the pandemic, most hospitals are seeing a large number of patients and often cannot provide the same services. Many hospitals will not allow in-person interpreters, family members, or visitors to come into the hospital. You may be alone for a long time when you are in the hospital. 

Most doctors and nurses in hospitals now wear masks and gloves and may talk to you from behind a window or curtain, so it may be harder for you to understand them.

You have the right to decide your care. This means you will need to know a few things and bring your own communication tools to the hospital during the pandemic:

If the hospital staff refuses to talk with you or respect your wishes, demand an “ethics consultation.” You can also contact [email protected] for help.

List of Advocacy Groups and Contributors to this Document

This guide was developed by deaf and hard of hearing groups, deaf doctors, and other experts:

(*consumer advocacy groups that advocate for the rights of deaf and hard of hearing people.)

List of Technology Tools2

While we do not endorse any specific tool or vendor, we are sharing a short list of known applications in alphabetical order. There are separate lists for people who use sign language, people who speak, listen and lip-read, and people who are DeafBlind. It is important to test and practice using any application before you go to the hospital.

For People who Use Sign Language

For face-to-face communication, you may want to consider supplemental speech-to-text options for understanding hearing people. You also may want to consider options for typing text back as a backup option. Some tools can translate between different languages.

Video Interpreting

Speech to Text

Typing Back

For phone calls,3 you may want to consider having more than one video relay service (VRS) provider’s app on your phone, in case your provider of choice experiences technical difficulties. You also may want to consider text-based relay services if you can’t get a reliable internet connection.

Text-based fallback options for phone calls

For People who Speak, Listen and/or Lip-Read

With face-to-face communication tools, you may want to consider speech-to-text options for understanding hearing people. You also may want to consider options for typing text back, as an emergency back-up option, even if you feel comfortable speaking. Some tools can translate between different languages.

Speech to Text

Typing Back

For phone calls,4 you may want to consider having more than one captioned telephone provider’s app on your phone, in case your provider of choice experiences technical difficulties.

Text-based fallback options for phone calls

For People who are DeafBlind

In addition to the tools above, DeafBlind people may want to load an application that can display text in large type.

DEAF/HARD OF HEARING/DEAFBLIND
MEDICAL PLACARD
(Word, PDF)

I AM DEAF/HARD OF HEARING/DEAFBLIND. 

I DO NOT UNDERSTAND YOU WITH YOUR MASK ON.

MY NAME IS                                                   .

HERE IS MY IDENTIFICATION CARD / DRIVER’S LICENSE.

PLEASE SPEAK INTO MY SMARTPHONE. I AM USING IT TO UNDERSTAND YOU.

PLEASE RESPECT MY LEGAL RIGHT TO UNDERSTAND YOU AND PARTICIPATE IN MY CARE BY ALLOWING ME TO USE THE SMARTPHONE. 

IF MY SMARTPHONE IS NOT WORKING WELL OR AT ALL, PLEASE WRITE DOWN WHAT YOU ARE TELLING ME.

Footnotes

  1. Data charges may apply.
  2. Some communications applications work by making audio recordings of what speakers are saying and transmitting them to Internet-based services for translation to text or sign-language. Because the recordings may contain sensitive, private medical information about the patient, patients should bear in mind the potential impacts on their privacy.
  3. The FCC currently prohibits the use of VRS when all parties to a call are in the same room. If parties are not in the same room, VRS is allowed. Patients should comply with all FCC rules.
  4. The FCC currently prohibits the use of VRS when all parties to a call are in the same room. If parties are not in the same room, VRS is allowed. Patients should comply with all FCC rules.