Open Access
Community Interpreting in mental health: research issues
Author(s) -
Hanneke Bot
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
linguistica antverpiensia new series - themes in translation studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2295-5739
DOI - 10.52034/lanstts.v5i.158
Subject(s) - interpreter , mental health , field (mathematics) , public relations , psychology , health care , service (business) , sociology , political science , computer science , psychiatry , business , marketing , mathematics , pure mathematics , law , programming language
The question this article tries to deal with is: how does mental health talk differfrom dialogue in other public service areas? The contribution starts with a description of the organization of interpreting in health care and the level ofprofessionalization of the field in the Netherlands, which is really not all that different from that in other western countries. Then a description and discussion of some major publications concerning interpreting in (mental) health care and their methodological backgrounds will be presented. However, only a few publications are based on a systematic investigation. Summarizing the findings from these research projects, we can conclude that the interpreter influences the content of the communication in several ways. Firstly, because of language pair dependent changes and, secondly, because of changes that are dependent on the interpreter: his1 (lack of) knowledge of the type of communication in hand; his (lack of) knowledge of the institutional setting in which the communication takes place and the specific linguistic characteristics of that type of talk; his (un)conscious personal ideas, values and norms which make him diverge from the original text. Finally, we will summarize where we stand as far as the knowledge about interpreting in mental health is concerned, and the contribution closes with some proposals for further research.