Title: culturally responsive obstetrical and gynecological care
1culturally responsiveobstetrical and
gynecological care
- Jean Gilbert, PhD
- Geri-Ann Galanti, PhD
Los Angeles County Department of Health Services
Office of Diversity Programs
2Who Thinks Cultural Competency is a Clinical
Skill?
- The Accreditation Council for Graduate Education
(Residency Programs) - The Association of American Medical Colleges
(Medical Schools) - The American College of Obstetrics and
- Gynecology
- The Los Angeles County Department of Health
Services Cultural and Linguistic Competency
Standards
3Why This Recent Emphasis on Culture and Health
Care?
- Major changes in the composition of the U.S.
population 25 of the California population is
foreign born. - Many immigrants are from non-Western nations
- with non-Western health concepts.
- Increasing emphasis on patient-centered care
- within medicine.
- Of the 1.7 million DHS patient visits over the
last - 6 months, about 779,000 were limited English
proficient, preferring services in 88 languages.
4If You And Your Patient Hold Very Different
Health Beliefs...
- This may impact on their trust in you and their
evaluation of your abilities. - It might impede understanding of your assessment
and treatment plan. - It may make obtaining consent for procedures very
difficult. - It might reduce willingness to comply with
treatment and follow-up.
5Culture is a Major Force in Shaping an
Individuals
- Expectations of a physician
- Perceptions of good and bad health
- Understanding of disease etiology
- Methods of preventive care
- Interpretation of symptoms
- Appropriate treatment
- Health care self-efficacy
6In Understanding Cultures, a Little Knowledge is
Dangerous
- Dont let cultural generalizations become
stereotypes. - Generalizations are testable probabilities we
couldnt do science without them. - Stereotypes attribute the central tendencies of
groups to individuals ignoring the bell curve! - Your patient is an individual, not a culture.
7The Importance of Womens Roles
- Which one of these women is the model for
- your patient?
8Acculturation is a Critical Factor in
- Family dynamics and gender roles
- Knowledge of and access to public and private
helping agencies. - Ability to speak and read English.
- Experience with the U.S. health care system.
9Video Lupes Dilemma
Video is part of the Multicultural Health Series,
a community service project of Kaiser Permanente
and The California Endowment.
10Cultural Resistance to Breast Cancer, PAP and STD
Screenings
- Lack of orientation to preventive care
- Fatalistic perspective
- Fear and embarrassment about pelvic
- examinations
- Social shame, invasion of bodily privacy
- Doctors push testing too early, endanger hymen
11Video A Big Baby is Coming
Video is part of the Multicultural Health Series,
a community service project of Kaiser Permanente
and The California Endowment.
12Gestational Diabetes
- Gestational diabetes is the most common
complication of pregnancy among Mexican
Americans. - Lack of early prenatal care often prevents
appropriate treatment. - Language issues often make appropriate education
and treatment difficult.
13Labor Pains
- Asian women tend to be stoic.
- African American women may
- be either.
14Labor Pains
- Iranian women tend to be
- expressive.
- Mexican women also tend to be
- expressive.
15Preferred Labor Attendants
Anglo American Husband or Domestic
Partner Hispanic Mother or Female
Relative Asian Mother or Mother-in-Law
16Video Hmong Birthing Practices
Video is part of the Multicultural Health Series,
a community service project of Kaiser Permanente
and The California Endowment.
17Hmong Prenatal and Birthing Practices
- Hmong women may resist napping and invasive
prenatal testing - Consent for prenatal and birthing procedures may
have to be gotten from parents, husband, and
in-laws - At childbirth, both mother and baby are
considered especially vulnerable to malevolent
spirits.
18Video Female Circumcision
Video is part of the Multicultural Health Series,
a community service project of Kaiser Permanente
and The California Endowment.
19.
Female Circumcision (aka Female Genital
Mutilation)
Normal Female Anatomy
Modified Sunna
Illustrations from Prisoners of Ritual, (1989) by
Hanny Lightfoot-Klein
20.
Female Circumcision (aka Female Genital
Mutilation)
Infibulation
Infibulation
Illustrations from Prisoners of Ritual, (1989) by
Hanny Lightfoot-Klein
21Breastfeeding
Colostrum
22Postpartum Lying-in
- Traditionally 30 - 42 days
- Rest, stay warm, avoid bathing exercise
- Eat foods designed to restore warmth
- Failure to follow custom is thought to result in
aches pains in later years
23Bonding
Bonding and Baby Naming
SERENA serene
Kabira powerful
Taci washtub
Radman joy
CALEB devotion to God
Duranjaya a heroic son
CHAN JUAN the moon graceful ladylike
24Menopause in Cultural Perspective
- Although menopause is universal, the symptoms
attributed to it are not. - Research suggests that the variety of ways
menopause is experienced can be termed local
biologies. - Cessation of the menses is looked upon very
positively by women in many cultures.
25Issues of Language Access in Health Care
- DHHS guidance for language access under the
- Title VI, Civil Rights Act of 1964
- MediCal contract regulations
- DHS Cultural Linguistic Standards
- Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations (JCAHO) includes standards for
cultural competence training and language
services.
26JCAHO Ruling
- JCAHO views the provision of linguistically
appropriate care as an important quality and
safety issue. - JCAHO requires the inclusion of language and
communication needs in the medical record. - Interpretation and translation must be provided
for patients who need it.
27DHHS says
- Assess patients language needs.
- Try not to use family or friends or whoever you
can grab. - Dont use minors to interpret.
- Try to use trained medical interpreters whenever
possible. - Use telephonic interpreters for rare languages.
28What Can You Do?
- Honestly assess your own bilingual skills
- Understand the pitfalls in using untrained
interpreters - Use interpreters effectively
- Use telephonic interpreters skillfully
29Are your bilingual skills really adequate? Can
you
- formulate questions easily?
- ask a question in more than one way?
- understand nuance and connotation in the
patients response to questions? - understand regional variations?
- know terms for anatomy and healthcare concepts?
- convert biomedical terms into lay terms in the
target language?
30Pitfalls in Using Untrained Interpreters
- Studies show that an average of 70 of the
interpreted exchanges by ad hoc interpreters
contain clinically important errors. - Family members, especially, are prone to edit
both the clinicians and patients utterances. - Children are frightened or intimidated if asked
to interpret. There are ethical problems
involved. - Confidentiality concerns must also be considered.
31The Effective Use of Face-to Face Interpreters
- Brief the interpreter first, if possible.
- Introduce the interpreter to the patient.
- Position the interpreter behind the patient or
behind you. - Speak and look directly at the patient.
- Use first person and expect the interpreter to do
the same. - Avoid interrupting the interpretation.
32Using Telephonic Interpreters
- Use a speaker phone do not pass a handset back
and forth. - Remember that the interpreter is blind to visual
- cues.
- Let the interpreter know who you are, who else is
- in the room, and what sort of patient
encounter it is. - Let the interpreter introduce her/himself.
33What You Need to Know to Connect
- The language needed
- Dial 0 for hospital operator
- Tell operator to connect you with the Language
Line. - Remember that the telephonic interpreter is bound
by confidentiality regulations, just as any other
health care personnel.
34What Can You Do To Be More Culturally Competent?
- Practice ways to build rapport
- Ask tactful, nonjudgmental questions about their
preferences and practices - Understand family roles in health care
- Know something about the cultural beliefs of your
patients, but dont stereotype - Use interpreters and use them effectively, dont
wing it.
35Consider
- Think back on your difficult patients.
- May any of the challenges they presented be
linked to their cultural beliefs or practices? - Would cultural competence skills have made a
difference?