Cultural awareness
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cultural awareness
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- II. CULTURAL AWARENESS POINTERS
CULTURAL AWARENESS I. INTRODUCTION Cultural awareness and competency is an essential part of working in a health care environment. Cultural competence is a set of attitudes, beliefs, behaviors, and policies that enable organizations and staff to work effectively in cross-cultural situations1. Health-related beliefs, disease prevalence, and treatment efficacy are all part of the health related issues of different populations that providers should have awareness on. Avoiding stereotypes is also an essential part of cultural awareness. It is important to remember that diversity is exists in all groups. II. CULTURAL AWARENESS POINTERS Some important points that providers should remember about cultural awareness include2: • Clinicians need to “check their own pulse” and become aware of personal attitudes, beliefs, biases, and behaviors, that may influence (consciously or unconsciously) care of patients as well as interactions with professional colleagues and staff from diverse racial, ethnic, and sociocultural backgrounds. • Every clinical encounter is cross-cultural. Developing partnerships with patients and maintaining “cultural humility” can help clinicians to learn and better understand the historical, familial, community, occupational, and environmental contexts in which patient’s live. • It should be understood that there is no “one” way to treat any racial and ethnic group, given the great sociocultural diversity within these broad classifications. We need instead to have a framework of interventions that can be individualized and applied in a patient- and family-centered fashion. • Clinical and preventative care needs to be evidence-based, flexible, authentic, and ethical. We need to appropriately tailor interventions to patients, families, and communities. • Cookbook approaches about working with patients from diverse sociocultural backgrounds are not useful and instead risk potentially dangerous stereotyping and overgeneralization. Important intergenerational differences exist, and diversity is often greater within groups than between them. • It is important to understand not only patient and community barriers to care, but also physician and health care system barriers to care. To eliminate racial 1 Lavizzo-Mourney and Mackenzie. “Cultural Competence: A Journey” 1996. 2 J. Betancourt & R. Like. “Editorial: A New Framework of Care” 2000 RI Department of Health Family Planning Guidelines 2 and ethnic disparity, health care providers and organizations need to become more culturally and linguistically competent. • We need to challenge and confront racism, sexism, classism, and other forms of prejudice and discrimination that occur in clinical encounters as well as in the society-at-large. Through collaboration and achieving a better understanding and appreciation of our commonalities and difference, patients and physicians can become empowered to work together with others to eliminate racial and ethnic disparities in health care2. Download 44 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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