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Fears over access to coronavirus guidance for non-English speakers

The Canary by The Canary
28 July 2020
in Health, Other News & Features, UK
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Concerns have been raised about a government “blind spot” on translating coronavirus guidance for many non-English speakers in the UK.

Charity Doctors of the World said public health messages had only been translated into a limited number of languages and had not been promptly updated when guidance changed.

It has co-ordinated a letter to health secretary Matt Hancock and communities secretary Robert Jenrick calling for a stronger focus on helping “excluded people”, according to the BBC.

More than 4.2 million people – or 7.7% of the population in England and Wales – said that English or Welsh was not their main language, according to the March 2011 census.

We’ve produced audio guidance in 59 languages for the first time! 🎧

We aim to keep migrants safe by continually updating our #COVID19 translated resources. Now you can listen to the latest advice in your community language too!

Please RT to save lives: https://t.co/z7XbsGwATc pic.twitter.com/e8nX91wjy8

— Doctors of the World (@DOTW_UK) July 22, 2020

Head of policy and advocacy Anna Miller told the broadcaster that attempting to draw attention to the “blind spot” was a struggle.

She said: “Ensuring public health information gets to everybody should have been the most basic, first thing in the government response. And ‘everybody’ includes people who don’t speak English.”

The charity’s website currently has NHS health advice and information translated into 60 languages, and created videos in 11 “priority languages” of Bengali, Bulgarian, English, Kurdish Sorani, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Spanish, Traditional Chinese, Turkish and Vietnamese.

The BBC reported that the resources from Doctors of the World had been downloaded around 60,000 times in the UK by organisations including police forces and those providing accommodation for asylum seekers.

Miller added: “It’s just been an absolute lack of communication, or refusal to communicate, from central government, that has meant we’ve had to get on and do (the translations) as if government doesn’t exist.”

The letter was sent on Monday evening and, according to the BBC, called for government to ensure the “quality and consistency” of public health messages.

It said: “As lockdown measures are eased and guidance changes regularly, it is not sustainable or practical for local authorities and civil society to meet this need.”

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