For approximately 500,000 Deaf people in the United States who use American Sign Language (ASL), accessing quality health care is challenging.1 Deaf people are more likely to have been admitted to a hospital in the past 12 months and have a history of chronic illness (e.g., cardiovascular disease, arthritis, HIV, obesity) compared with those without hearing impairment.2,3 Contributing factors include lack of cultural competency, few appropriately trained ASL interpreters, insufficient clinician education, and low health literacy levels.4 Deaf is defined here as people who are culturally Deaf (values, traditions, and norms5,6) and use ASL as a primary mode of communication.

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