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Transcultural Care

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... by similarities in ethnicity, language, religion, geography, history or politics. ... Clarifier: Facilitates understanding when no linguistic equivalence exists ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Transcultural Care


1
Transcultural Care
2
Culture
  • The shared values, traditions, norms, customs,
    arts, history, folklore, and institutions of a
    group of people that are unified by race,
    ethnicity, language, nationality, or religion.
  • Source Office of Minority and Womens Health,
    HRSA, NIH

3
Characteristics of Culture
  • Learned roles, behaviors, values, attitudes
  • Human nature, time, relationships, traditions
  • Health beliefs, religion or spirituality
  • Communication, decision-making, food/diet,
    grief/dying, family roles, sick roles.

4
Characteristics of Culture
  • Stabilizing forces and change agents
  • Social Structure
  • Family, politics, education, economics, art,
    history, physical environment, health care
    facilities, ethnicity

5
Criteria for Defining Culture
  • Common language/communication system
  • Similarities in dietary preferences
  • Common patterns of dress
  • Predictable relationships and socialization
    patterns
  • Shared values and beliefs

6
Personal Culture
  • Personality, unique structure
  • Internal factors such as gender, age, sexual
    orientation
  • External factors such as society, personal
    experiences
  • Where one grows up or now lives
  • With or without children, with or without
    religious affiliation
  • Organizational/work influences
  • Position within work place and its location

7
Cultural Diversity
  • Difference in Race, ethnicity, language,
    nationality, or religion among various groups
    within a community is said to be culturally
    diverse if its residents include members of
    different groups.
  • Source Office of Minority and Womens Health.
    HRSA, NIH

8
Diversity
  • Differences can be found in communities that are
    bounded by similarities in ethnicity, language,
    religion, geography, history or politics.
  • Every interaction is cross-cultural!

9
Ethnicity
  • Identity one has based on ancestry and national,
    religious, tribal, linguistic or cultural
    origins.
  • Sense of belonging to a reference group within a
    society

10
Race
  • Use of the term is debated
  • Biological term used to categorize people based
    on physical characteristics
  • Disregards genetic variations
  • Often used in discriminatory manner

11
Acculturation
  • Giving up traits of one culture and adopting
    those of another
  • Bicultural function equally well in two
    cultures
  • Traditional retains traits from culture of
    origin
  • Marginal no traits from either culture or
    origin or new one in which he/she lives
  • Acculturated gives up traits of original
    culture and adopts those of new culture

12
Assimilation
  • Social, political, and economic integration of a
    cultural group into a mainstream society
  • Usually requires a degree of acculturation
  • Many cultural groups may resist or reject
    acculturation
  • Communities develop in which people are insulated
    from main stream
  • Lack of political voice may disadvantage group

13
Ethnocentrism
  • Viewpoint that ones own way of believing or
    behaving is correct and preferred
  • Ethnosensitivity
  • Process of becoming more sensitive and respectful
    of cross cultural differences

14
Cultural Competence
  • A set of academic and interpersonal skills that
    allow individuals to increase their understanding
    and appreciation of cultural differences and
    similarities within, among, and between groups.
    This requires a willingness and ability to draw
    on community-based values, traditions, and
    customs and to work with knowledgeable persons of
    and from the community in developing targeted
    interventions, communications and other support.
  • Source Office of Minority and Womens Health,
    HRSA, NIH

15
5 Elements of Cultural Competence
  • Awareness and acceptance of differences
  • Self-awareness or individual or organizational
    culture
  • Understanding the dynamics of difference
  • Integration of cultural knowledge within
    individuals and systems
  • Adaptation to diversity

16
Steps to Cultural Competence
  • Awareness
  • Becoming aware of other cultural viewpoints and
    taking into account the diversity in values,
    beliefs, practices, lifestyles and problem
    solving strategies
  • Examination of ones own culture, learned biases
    and prejudices

17
  • Knowledge
  • Learning about historical, social, political
    and/or religious influences that affect anothers
    worldview
  • Distinguishing between an individuals traits and
    those common to a community or people with
    similar origins
  • Give and take of ideas and knowledge for
    effective interpersonal relationships

18
  • Skills
  • Integrating awareness and knowledge into western
    bio-medical system during a cross-cultural
    encounter to achieve culture-specific,
    individualized interventions
  • Collecting relevant cultural data in both a
    history and physical assessment
  • Ability to generate conversation not
    confrontation
  • Partnerships instead of misunderstandings

19
  • Cultural Encounters
  • Cross-cultural interactions that allow new
    learning or refinement of knowledge and beliefs
  • Prevent stereotyping as the experience of
    interaction reveals intra-cultural group variation

20
Medical Interpreters
  • People who orally translates a message spoken in
    one language into another language
  • People who are fluent in both languages
  • People who are not relatives of the patient
  • People who have received professional training

21
Use of Interpreters
  • Secure an interpreter for people who
  • Are non-English speaking
  • Are limited English proficient
  • Have limited understanding of health care issues
    in the English language

22
Professional Interpreters VS Untrained
Interpreters
  • Professional interpreters have been screened to
    assure fluency in both languages
  • Untrained interpreters may
  • Omit important information
  • Add ideas
  • Answer for the patient
  • Give advice even if they dont understand

23
Family and Friends Used as Interpreters
  • May commit all of the errors as other untrained
    interpreters
  • May cause the patient to not feel comfortable
    sharing information
  • May react to a situation or information rather
    than serve as an interpreter
  • May make decisions for the patient
  • There may be a breach of confidentiality

24
Acceptable Interpreters
  • Bilingual staff that is trained and demonstrates
    competence
  • Contract interpreters
  • Community volunteers who are competent
    interpreters
  • Telephone interpreter services

25
Working Effectively Through an Interpreter
  • Conduct pre-session to introduce yourself and
    goals for the encounter
  • Speak directly to the patient
  • Speak slowly in short segments with pauses
  • Ask that everything you and the patient and
    family says is interpreted
  • Be aware there may not be linguistic equivalence
    for some terms

26
Things to Avoid
  • Highly idiomatic speech
  • Complicated sentence structure
  • Sentence fragments
  • Changing an idea in mid-sentence
  • Asking more than one question at a time

27
Tips
  • Have the interpreter ask questions and alert you
    to cultural misunderstandings
  • Respect an interpreters opinion that a question
    may be culturally inappropriate
  • Avoid patronizing or demeaning the patient
  • Be patient as this may take more time

28
Roles of the Interpreter
  • Conduit of Information
  • Clarifier Facilitates understanding when no
    linguistic equivalence exists
  • Culture Broker Provides a cultural framework
    for understanding when cultural differences are
    leading to a misunderstanding
  • Advocate Actions to eliminate systematic
    barriers to quality care
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