Interpreting in Healthcare & Medical Settings Training Program

Advance Your Skills for Professional Medical Interpreting

Build the specialized knowledge, confidence, and practical competence you need to interpret safely and effectively in healthcare environments. Grounded in the Canadian healthcare system and aligned with national standards, this program prepares you to work in hospitals, clinics, and community health settings—and supports your readiness for the CTTIC Medical Interpreter certification exam.

What You’ll Learn

Develop a strong foundation in:

  • The professional role and responsibilities of the healthcare interpreter
  • Essential skills for fast-paced, high-stakes medical encounters
  • Medical and healthcare terminology
  • Canada’s healthcare system, key organizations, and service pathways
  • Medical specialties, hospital departments, and levels of care
  • Common illnesses, conditions, procedures, and treatments
  • Models of health, well-being, and patient-centred care
  • How culture, communication, and context shape health decisions
  • Intercultural and interpersonal communication skills in clinical settings

Plus, You’ll Also Get:

  • Interactive role plays, case studies, and simulation activities
  • Live online classes and real-time discussions
  • Curated resources and links
  • A comprehensive student manual

Certificate of Successful Completion recognized across Canada

Strengthen your professional practice, deepen your subject-matter expertise, and enhance your employability in one of the most in-demand interpreting fields.

Find out more: www.interpreterslab.org/programs-healthcare-interpreter-training

Have questions before you join? Sign up for a FREE INFORMATION SESSION  and get all your questions answered before you sign up.

Raising the Standard: Language Access and the Role of Trained Healthcare Interpreters

Language access is a cornerstone of equity in healthcare: without it, care is not equally accessible, effective, or safe. For people who do not speak the same language as the service provider, or are Deaf or hard of hearing, access to trained interpreters is not just helpful — it’s essential for receiving safe, respectful, and effective care.

Interpreters working in signed or spoken languages, such as Mandarin, Arabic, Farsi, Punjabi, or any of the other 200+ languages spoken in Canada, play a vital role when it comes to public services in Canada – like healthcare. They help ensure that patients understand critical information, can provide informed consent, and are heard. Their work supports not only individual patients, but the quality and fairness of the healthcare system as a whole, and the professional integrity of the healthcare team. Extending beyond that, the work of interpreters contributes to more cohesive communities by bridging linguistic and cultural divides, fostering trust, and ensuring that all voices are heard in our every day lives.

When Every Word Matters: Interpreting in Canadian Medical Encounters

Healthcare interpreting also presents unique challenges. Like many specialized settings, it requires knowledge of specific terminology—not just medical terms, but also jargon unique to healthcare and distinctive of the Canadian system and context. While the biomedical model may be broadly consistent across countries—even those sharing the same language—the real distinctions lie in the broader context: how healthcare is organized, accessed, and delivered, as well as the cultural expectations and systemic nuances that shape patient-provider interactions. These differences have a significant impact on how we train interpreters at The Interpreter’s Lab. Effective interpreting depends not only on language fluency and interpreting competences, but on an understanding of these systems, roles, and protocols that influence every healthcare encounter.

Healthcare settings are emotionally complex and constantly shifting, often placing interpreters in the middle of deeply personal and difficult conversations. From end-of-life discussions to emotionally charged decisions, interpreters must stay poised, impartial, and accurate while navigating evolving emotions and sensitive interpersonal dynamics.

Interpreters working in medical settings must understand clinical systems, stay grounded in their professional role, and remain composed in difficult moments—all while making space for individuals to speak and be heard. This is why setting-specific training is essential. Without it, navigating the complexity of medical encounters has the potential to overwhelm interpreters and ultimately affect everyone involved.

“A patient without a professional interpreter is less likely to understand their diagnosis, less likely to be able to give fully informed consent for treatment, and ultimately less likely to adhere to their treatment protocol.” (National Standards for Healthcare Equity, p. 10)

Interpreting in Healthcare & Medical Settings is a specialized training program that helps interpreters build the knowledge and skills required to meet these challenges.

The Interpreting in Healthcare and Medical Settings covers:
• Canadian healthcare systems
• Medical and related terminology
• Ethics and role maintenance
• Cultural safety and the role of culture in healthcare
• Interpreting protocols and navigating complexities
• Techniques to manage assignment preparation, focus, memory, and accuracy

Specialized Interpreter Training Supports Quality Care and Equity in Service Provision

Training at The Interpreter’s Lab strengthens interpreters’ ability to work effectively with clinicians across disciplines and support patients from diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds. By exploring how culture shapes health beliefs and communication, interpreters are better equipped to support meaningful interactions and contribute to more equitable care.

Our programs provide the tools, frameworks, and reflective practices needed to navigate ethical tensions in real time—helping interpreters stay grounded, make informed decisions, and uphold the integrity of their role, even under pressure.

The Human Element – Mission Critical
The human element in healthcare and medical interpreting cannot be understated: People are essential to the success of this work. While AI is often promoted as a solution to language barriers, the perception that it works well is often stronger than its actual effectiveness. In healthcare, where communication is dynamic, emotional, and deeply rooted in interpersonal and intercultural realities, AI is rarely a reliable or ethical substitute. It cannot interpret tone, context, or nuance, and it cannot support clarity or cultural safety. Human interpreters remain essential to ensuring language access that is accurate, appropriate, and equitable.

“People are essential to the success of this work.”

Interpreting in healthcare is more than just language work. It’s a critical part of ensuring language rights and language access and reducing barriers to care. Specialized training helps interpreters bring clarity, dignity, and equity into every conversation.

Resources and Additional Readings

  1. “When I’m sick, I’m not bilingual” – Language Support is Health Equity (2025). Access HERE
  2. Investing in Language Access to Optimize Health System Performance (Research Snapshot). Found HERE 
  3. Access to Health Care – addressing the Language Barriers (2009). Found HERE
  4. Medical Interpreting Services for Refugees in Canada – Current State of Practice and Considerations in Promoting this Essential Human Right for All (2024). Found HERE
  5. National Standards for Healthcare Equity: The Case for Provincial Interpretation Services. National Newcomer Navigation Network (2022). Found at Newcomer Access to Professional Interpretation Services in Healthcare

Interpreting in Healthcare and Medical Settings

Interpreting in Healthcare & Medical Settings
Specialized Interpreter Training Program

Gain the specialized skills and knowledge you need to succeed as a medical interpreter.

Interpreting in healthcare settings is complex, demanding, and deeply impactful. This course prepares you to work confidently alongside general practitioners, nurses, surgeons, specialists, and other health professionals—both in-person and remotely.

  • Required for entry into our advanced Mental Health & Complex Settings program
  • Helps prepare for the CTTIC Medical Interpreter Certification Exam
  • Taught by expert Canadian Certified Medical Interpreters with 20+ years of experience

What to Expect:

  • Interactive role plays and case studies

  • Live discussions and simulation activities

  • Student manual, curated resources, and support

Prerequisite:
Completion of the Community Settings Foundational Training Program is required before enrolling.

REGISTER HERE OR BY SELECTING THE LINK ON THE LEFT

Have questions before you register? Sign up for a FREE INFORMATION SESSION. And get all your questions answered before you sign up.