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CardMedic and LanguageLine announce app integration

CardMedic, the digital platform transforming clinician and patient communication, has announced a major integration with LanguageLine Solutions, the global leader in on-demand interpretation.
The partnership brings one-click access to live, professional video and audio interpreters in more than 240 languages directly within the CardMedic app.
The integration will help clinicians deliver safe, inclusive, and human-centered care at the point of need.
Dr Rachael Grimaldi, co-founder and chief medical officer of CardMedic said: “Our mission is to remove barriers that stand in the way of safe, compassionate care.
“This integration with LanguageLine gives clinicians fast and reliable access to professional interpreters alongside all of CardMedic’s inclusive tools, making communication more effective and equitable than ever before.”
CardMedic’s digital app breaks down language, cognitive, and sensory barriers, providing clinicians with instant access to multilingual and multimodal tools that support patients across a wide range of communication requirements.
With LanguageLine’s trusted interpreter network now embedded into the platform, CardMedic becomes the only solution of its kind to combine prewritten clinical content, AI powered accessibility tools, and live interpretation in one seamless workflow.
CardMedic was quickly developed during the COVID 19 pandemic in response to urgent communication breakdowns caused by masks and PPE.
Since then, it has grown into a comprehensive healthcare language support platform, used across NHS trusts in the UK and expanding internationally into the United States.
Designed in collaboration with clinicians and refined through real patient feedback, the app is simple to use, fast to deploy, and built to fit within clinical workflows across acute, emergency, and routine care.
With the new integration, healthcare staff can connect to a live LanguageLine interpreter within seconds, directly inside the CardMedic app.
Whether a conversation starts with a multilingual script or with an AI powered sign language avatar, clinicians can now escalate immediately to human interpretation with no disruption to care.
The experience includes intelligent language selection, optional department code support, and device flexibility.
Early feedback from NHS and US health systems points to faster decision making, improved patient understanding, and reduced delays.
CardMedic’s AI is guided by a clinician in the loop model that ensures all content is accurate, culturally sensitive, and accessible at a 6 to 8-year reading level. The platform complies with GDPR, is tested to minimise bias, and is designed to complement human interpreters rather than replace them.
The result is a flexible, ethical, and scalable communication solution that strengthens understanding, safety, and trust across diverse patient populations.
CardMedic has been cited in NHS England’s 2025 Patient Safety Healthcare Inequalities Reduction Framework and supported by key innovation programs including the NHS Innovation Accelerator, Clinical Entrepreneur Programme, MassChallenge, and Texas Medical Center Innovation.
As healthcare systems continue to focus on reducing disparities, CardMedic’s all in one platform is uniquely positioned to support scalable, equitable care across urgent and planned settings.
Simon Yoxon-Grant, president and CEO of LanguageLine Solutions said: “When a clinician can connect with a patient in their own language, it affirms the patient’s right to be heard.
“We’re proud to work with CardMedic to deliver that kind of access at the point of care.”
Looking ahead, CardMedic is developing personalised interpretation pathways, digital consent support, and communication tools for underserved communities.
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Endometriosis documentary profiles stars including Marilyn Monroe and Amy Schumer

A non-profit has launched an endometriosis documentary featuring Amy Schumer and Marilyn Monroe as it pushes for changes in how the condition is treated and understood.
The Endometriosis Collective has launched to change how endometriosis is researched, treated and understood, starting with a documentary featuring stories from people including Amy Schumer and Marilyn Monroe.
The feature-length documentary, “End of the Cycle”, will premiere in New York on Tuesday, and The Endometriosis Collective is making the film free to stream online.
Schumer, a comedian, writer and actor, has previously spoken of how endometriosis left her “on the floor in pain, vomiting from the pain, the pain that nobody can see.”
Schumer is one of several celebrities featured in the documentary. Other contributors include dancer Julianne Hough, Olympic medallist Brittany Brown and actors Janel Parrish and Folake Olowofoyeku.
The Endometriosis Collective timed the documentary premiere to coincide with the 100th anniversary of Marilyn Monroe’s birth.
Monroe, who died in 1962, starred in films such as “Some Like It Hot” and “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.”
According to a biography published in 1985, Monroe’s endometriosis was so severe that it destroyed her marriages, her wish for children, her career and ultimately her life.
The Endometriosis Collective said the documentary shares newly uncovered information about Monroe’s experience with endometriosis.
The non-profit said the information connects Monroe’s story to the experiences of women across generations, highlighting how far awareness, research and care still have to go.
A representative of the Marilyn Monroe Estate said: “By sharing this part of her story through ‘End of the Cycle,’ we hope to honour her legacy in a way that brings visibility to endometriosis, encourages more open dialogue and helps inspire the research needed to create change.”
As part of the premiere, The Endometriosis Collective is holding a panel discussion.
Schumer, Brown and Olowofoyeku, the documentary’s co-directors Sammy Jaye and Soraya Simi, and medical experts are due to be part of the premiere.
AbbVie’s Orilissa and Sumitomo Pharma’s Myfembree are among the approved drugs for endometriosis pain.
Hough, one of the participants in the documentary, starred in an Orilissa campaign in 2017.
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