RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Patient–physician language concordance and quality and safety outcomes among frail home care recipients admitted to hospital in Ontario, Canada JF Canadian Medical Association Journal JO CMAJ FD Canadian Medical Association SP E899 OP E908 DO 10.1503/cmaj.212155 VO 194 IS 26 A1 Seale, Emily A1 Reaume, Michael A1 Batista, Ricardo A1 Eddeen, Anan Bader A1 Roberts, Rhiannon A1 Rhodes, Emily A1 McIsaac, Daniel I. A1 Kendall, Claire E. A1 Sood, Manish M. A1 Prud’homme, Denis A1 Tanuseputro, Peter YR 2022 UL http://www.cmaj.ca/content/194/26/E899.abstract AB Background: When patients and physicians speak the same language, it may improve the quality and safety of care delivered. We sought to determine whether patient–physician language concordance is associated with in-hospital and postdischarge outcomes among home care recipients who were admitted to hospital.Methods: We conducted a population-based study of a retrospective cohort of 189 690 home care recipients who were admitted to hospital in Ontario, Canada, between 2010 and 2018. We defined patient language (obtained from home care assessments) as English (Anglophone), French (Francophone) or other (allophone). We obtained physician language from the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. We defined hospital admissions as language concordant when patients received more than 50% of their care from physicians who spoke the patients’ primary language. We identified in-hospital (adverse events, length of stay, death) and post-discharge outcomes (emergency department visits, readmissions, death within 30 days of discharge). We used regression analyses to estimate the adjusted rate of mean and the adjusted odds ratio (OR) of each outcome, stratified by patient language, to assess the impact of language-concordant care within each linguistic group.Results: Allophone patients who received language-concordant care had lower risk of adverse events (adjusted OR 0.25, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.15–0.43) and in-hospital death (adjusted OR 0.44, 95% CI 0.29–0.66), as well as shorter stays in hospital (adjusted rate of mean 0.74, 95% CI 0.66–0.83) than allophone patients who received language-discordant care. Results were similar for Francophone patients, although the magnitude of the effect was smaller than for allophone patients. Language concordance or discordance of the hospital admission was not associated with significant differences in postdischarge outcomes.Interpretation: Patients who received most of their care from physicians who spoke the patients’ primary language had better in-hospital outcomes, suggesting that disparities across linguistic groups could be mitigated by providing patients with language-concordant care.