Justice Department Resolves Litigation with Laurel Regional Hospital

WASHINGTON — The Department of Justice today announced a comprehensive consent decree under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) with Laurel Regional Hospital, a community hospital serving the Maryland suburbs of Washington. The hospital has agreed to ensure effective communication with patients or companions who are deaf or hard of hearing.

“Patients and their families need to be able to communicate with medical providers for proper diagnosis and treatment,” said Wan J. Kim, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division. “I commend the Laurel Regional Hospital for working with us, and I hope that this agreement will be a model for other hospitals to make certain that individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing have the same access to medical care and treatment.”

The consent decree, filed in federal court in Greenbelt, Md., resolves allegations that on several occasions the hospital did not appropriately respond to requests to provide qualified sign language interpreters or other auxiliary aids for patients or companions. For example, the Department's complaint alleged that the hospital refused to communicate with a deaf woman whose son, an emergency department patient, was in and out of consciousness and that a former patient who was discharged did not understand her diagnosis or treatment recommendations and, which resulted in her being rushed to another hospital shortly thereafter to receive medical treatment there.

Today's agreement in Gillespie and United States v. Dimensions Health Corporation resolves a lawsuit by several individual plaintiffs, in which the Department of Justice intervened. Read more at usdoj.com

 

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