Training medical providers to serve diverse deaf patients: Age-based intervention effects in a randomized trial

Disabil Health J. 2026 Apr;19(2):102019. doi: 10.1016/j.dhjo.2025.102019. Epub 2025 Dec 18.

Abstract

Background: Deaf American Sign Language users are severely underserved in the U.S. healthcare system. To address longstanding inaccessibility and mistrust, our Deaf community-led team produced a film to train providers to better serve Deaf patients - Vital Signs.

Objective: We conducted a two-arm randomized controlled trial to evaluate preliminary efficacy of Vital Signs among healthcare providers and health professions students.

Methods: Participants were randomly assigned to review Vital Signs or intervention as usual - standard written guidance about working with Deaf patients. Intervention completers were invited to participate in a simulation with a Deaf standardized patient. Three Deaf team members were trained to review simulation recordings and complete validated patient self-report measures of provider behavior: Healthcare Provider Cultural Competency; Ask, Understand, and Remember Assessment; and Wake Forest Physician Trust Scale.

Results: Of 208 enrolled participants, 52 completed all study components and were included in final analyses. A clear pattern of results emerged - participant age influenced learning and behavior change in response to different training strategies. Participants aged 33+ who viewed Vital Signs scored higher on content knowledge compared to same-aged peers who reviewed training as usual, but worse across measures of cultural competency, communication skill, and trust-building. An opposite pattern emerged for participants younger than 33 years - those who watched Vital Signs exhibited greater cultural competence, communication skill, and trust-building abilities than same-aged peers who reviewed standard written guidance.

Conclusion: Future steps include an implementation trial of various Vital Signs training configurations, evaluating strategies for training health professions students versus experienced providers.

Keywords: Deaf; DeafBlind; Education; Hard of Hearing; Healthcare; Randomized trial; Training.

Publication types

  • Randomized Controlled Trial

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Age Factors
  • Aged
  • Communication
  • Cultural Competency*
  • Deafness*
  • Female
  • Health Personnel* / education
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Persons with Hearing Disabilities*
  • Sign Language*
  • Trust
  • United States