TITLE:
Language Barriers in Maternal Healthcare: Effects on Prenatal Care Access, Perinatal Outcomes, and Strategies for Equitable Care
AUTHORS:
Armando Alberto Moreno-Santillan, Leidy Marcela Martínez-Adame, Brenda Cunningham
KEYWORDS:
Language Barriers, Prenatal Care, Perinatal Outcomes
JOURNAL NAME:
Health,
Vol.17 No.12,
December
8,
2025
ABSTRACT: Language barriers in maternal healthcare contribute substantially to disparities in prenatal access, quality of care, and perinatal outcomes among migrant populations. Limited proficiency in the host country’s language delays care initiation, impairs provider-patient communication, and reduces adherence to clinical guidance, leading to increased obstetric complications, adverse neonatal outcomes, and elevated perinatal mental health risks. These challenges are compounded by systemic factors such as inconsistent interpreter availability, fragmented healthcare delivery, and intersecting social determinants including immigration status and socioeconomic deprivation. Psychological impacts include heightened anxiety, depression, and mistrust, which further hinder engagement with healthcare services. Structural and provider-level obstacles, including insufficient training and resource constraints, exacerbate inequities in care provision. Interventions encompassing legislative mandates for certified interpreter services, integration of cultural competence, technology-assisted interpretation, and community-based education demonstrate promise but require sustained funding and systemic embedding to achieve equitable maternal and neonatal health outcomes. Future efforts must prioritize comprehensive evaluation of language proficiency measures, disaggregated analysis of interpretation modalities, and longitudinal tracking of clinical and psychosocial endpoints to inform policy and practice reforms that address linguistic exclusion as a core determinant of maternal-child health equity globally.