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In this moving episode of the Provider Pulse Series of the EthnoMed podcast, we hear the extraordinary life story of Jeniffer Huong — one of Harborview’s original Cultural Care Mediators in the Community House Calls Program, which now serves patients in eight different languages.
Born in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Jeniffer’s early years were shaped by discipline, education, and family aspiration—until the Khmer Rouge forced her family from their home in 1975. She survived years of displacement, labor camps, and loss before escaping to refugee camps in Thailand and the Philippines, and eventually resettling in Oregon.
In this conversation, Jeniffer reflects on the psychological toll of survival, the unspoken trauma carried by many Cambodian refugees, and how those experiences shaped her work at Harborview—helping members of the Cambodian community navigate illness, loss, and the U.S. healthcare system with empathy and cultural understanding.
Her story is one of survival, service, and transformation—reminding us that behind every patient is a layered history of resilience, migration, and healing.
Content Warning: This episode contains discussion of war, genocide, and trauma during the Khmer Rouge period in Cambodia.
Visit EthnoMed.org for additional resources. Follow us on YouTube and Instagram @EthnoMedUW
By Dr. Duncan Reid, MD @ EthnoMed.orgSend us a text
In this moving episode of the Provider Pulse Series of the EthnoMed podcast, we hear the extraordinary life story of Jeniffer Huong — one of Harborview’s original Cultural Care Mediators in the Community House Calls Program, which now serves patients in eight different languages.
Born in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Jeniffer’s early years were shaped by discipline, education, and family aspiration—until the Khmer Rouge forced her family from their home in 1975. She survived years of displacement, labor camps, and loss before escaping to refugee camps in Thailand and the Philippines, and eventually resettling in Oregon.
In this conversation, Jeniffer reflects on the psychological toll of survival, the unspoken trauma carried by many Cambodian refugees, and how those experiences shaped her work at Harborview—helping members of the Cambodian community navigate illness, loss, and the U.S. healthcare system with empathy and cultural understanding.
Her story is one of survival, service, and transformation—reminding us that behind every patient is a layered history of resilience, migration, and healing.
Content Warning: This episode contains discussion of war, genocide, and trauma during the Khmer Rouge period in Cambodia.
Visit EthnoMed.org for additional resources. Follow us on YouTube and Instagram @EthnoMedUW