Title: Cultural Competency
1Cultural Competency
- Kaye A. Love, MS, LSW, CCM
- Case Manager
- November 1, 2010
- Rehabilitation Hospital of Ft. Wayne
- 260-435-6113
- klove_at_lutheran-hosp.com
2Cultural Competency Learning Objectives
- What culture and cultural competency is.
- Evaluating ourselves.
- Why it is important to our work ?
- Demographics of America is changing one size
does not fit all - Disparities in Health Status exist
- Access to Health Care is not equal
- Quality of patient care and outcomes are impacted
- How can we implement cultural services?
- Techniques for developing competency and
addressing language barriers. - Considerations in caring for Amish, Burmese,
Indian, Asian and Hispanic patients. - Post Test (separate document).
3Cultural Competency in the Health Care Setting
- What is Cultural Competence?
- Cultural competence is a set of attitudes,
skills, behaviors and policies that enable
organizations and staff to work efficiently in
cross-cultural situations. It reflects the
ability to acquire and use knowledge of health
care related beliefs, attitudes, practices and
communication patterns of clients and their
families to improve services, strengthen
programs, increase community participation and
close the gaps in health status among diverse
population groups. - MSH (Management Sciences
for Health) - Other terms for cultural competence include
cultural proficiency and cultural humility. - Effective cross-cultural competency equates to
tailoring the delivery of health care to meet the
patients social, cultural and linguistic needs. -
4What is culture?
- The learned, shared, transmitted values and
- beliefs and practices of a particular group that
- guide the thinking, actions, behaviors,
interactions, - emotions and view of the world are
- Art
- Relationships
- Family obligations
- Customs
- Gender roles
- Clothing
- Preventative health
- Environment
- Illness and death
- Economics
- Sexuality
- Religion
- Diet
5Acquiring Cultural Competence
- It starts with your awareness.
- It grows with knowledge.
- It is enhanced with specific skills.
- It is polished with cross cultural encounters.
- Embracing diversity encompasses acceptance and
respect.
6Diversity - Some Considerations
- OURS
- Make better
- Control over nature
- Do something
- Strong measures
- Standardize
- THEIRS
- Accept with grace
- Balance/harmony with nature
- Wait and see
- Gentle approach
- Individualize
7Self Assessment or ReflectionWhere am I now?
Where could I be?
- What are your attitudes, knowledge and skills in
related to cultural and linguistic competence? - What are some barriers and opportunities that you
have? - How aware are you of the prevalence of
significant health care disparities? - Do you have an honest desire to not allow biases
to keep you from treating every individual with
respect and optimum care? - Are you honestly capable of looking at your
negative and positive assumptions about others? - Learning to evaluate our own level of cultural
competence must be a part of improving the health
care system.
8Cultural Competency Self Test
- Do you respect different health care behaviors
practiced by our clients? - Name two ways that our hospital is responsive to
diverse groups. - Is culture, gender and race taken into
consideration when assessing patients and
educating on disease? - Does a patients background play a role in
his/her treatment plan?
9Culture and Language may Influence
- Health, healing and wellness belief systems.
- Illness, disease and how causes are perceived.
- How health care treatment is sought and attitudes
toward providers, impacting treatment. - Delivery of health care services by providers who
may compromise access for patients from other
cultures.
10How well prepared are you to work with patients
of diverse populations?
- Do you consider the individuals culture when
planning and coordinating care? - Do you ensure that individuals who do not speak
English have trained certified medical
interpreters? - Do you modify your educational and printed
materials to meet the unique needs or learning
styles of a diverse population? - Are you knowledgeable of the culturally and
racially diverse population in our area? - What is your degree of proficiency in performing
culturally competent tasks? - Is the educational support and communication
present for you to meet best practice standards?
11Researchers have found classic negative and
racial stereotypes
-
- It is found that racial and ethic minorities in
the United States receive lower quality health
care than whites even when their insurance and
income are the same.
12Demographics of America
- Our diverse nation is expected to become
substantially more so over next several decades. - The U.S. Census Bureau projects that by 2050,
populations historically termed minorities will
make up 50 of the population. - The Hispanicorigin population will be the
fastest growing ethnic group doubling by 2050. - Onesixth of the U.S. population speaks a
language other than English at home. - The international migration rate is growing
faster every year. - We live in an increasingly heterogeneous society.
13Disparities in Health Status
- Racial and ethnic minorities experience
persistent and often increasing disparity across
a number of health care variables. - Members of minorities suffer disproportionately
from cardiovascular disease, diabetes, asthma,
TB, HIV/AIDS and cancer. - Variations in patients ability to recognize
symptoms of disease and illness, thresholds for
seeking care, barriers related to mistrust,
expectations of care, including preferences for
or against treatment plans, diagnostic testing
and procedures and the ability to comprehend what
is prescribed may influence the health care
providers decisions. - Causes of disparity are multi-factorial and often
are related to social determinants external to
the heath care system.
14Disparity in Access to Health Care
- Assessing high quality health care is often
influenced by the lack of an ongoing relationship
with a provider, thus reducing use of specialty
services and preventative care. - The increased use of the emergency room as their
regular place of care is problematic. - Non-English speaking patients may be reluctant to
seek treatment in a timely manner and if they
have low health care literacy treatment adherence
may be an issue.
15Disparities in Health Insurance Coverage
- One in six Americans is uninsured and those
without coverage is growing. - Cost is the major barrier and many low income
uninsured families are not eligible for public
programs or lack the knowledge and literacy for
enrollment. - Confusion and fear inhibit immigrants from
obtaining coverage. - More than one in three Hispanics and American
Indians/ Alaska Natives do not have health
insurance - triple that for whites.
16Disparities in Quality
- The Institute of Medicine indicates that health
care should exhibit six key quality components
safe, timely, effective, efficient,
patient-centered and equitable. All six must be
present for it to be high quality and in all
these areas there are significant disparities in
care delivered to racial and ethnic minorities. - The behavior of caring exists in all cultures.
Our first goal is to anticipate the individual
needs of our patients and seek to become
personally engaged with them to provide the kind
of caring that is humanly their right.
17Quality is Being Addressed. Look for continued
ongoing efforts to improve as we move up the
Cultural Competence Continuum.
18Barriers to be Overcome
- Language /Communication and Limited English
Proficiency (LEP). - Health Care Literacy
- Health care literacy is the capacity of
individuals to obtain, process and understand
basic health care information and services in
order to make sound decisions and give informed
consent. - What did the Doctor say?
- The safety of patients cannot be assured without
mitigating the negative effects of low health
care literacy and ineffective communication on
patient care. The Joint Commission
19Promising Communication Strategies
- LEARN Guidelines for Overcoming Obstacles in
Cross Cultural Communication - Listen with empathy for the patients perception
of the problem. - Explain your perception of the problem.
- Acknowledge and discuss the similarities and
differences. - Recommend the treatment.
- Negotiate agreement.
20ETHNIC A Framework for Culturally Competent
Clinical Practice
- Explanation
- What do you think may be the reason you have
these symptoms? - What do friends and family say about these
symptoms? - Do you know anyone else with this problem?
- What have you heard on the TV or radio about the
condition? - Treatment
- Medicines, home remedies or other treatments have
been tried - Is there anything you eat, drink or avoid to
stay healthy? - Please tell me about It. What treatment are you
seeking? - Healers
- Alternative or folk healers. Tell me about it
- Negotiate
- Negotiate mutually acceptable options that
incorporate your patients beliefs - Intervention
- Determine an intervention which may include
alternative treatments - spirituality, healers,
etc. - Collaboration with family, health care team,
healers, community resources.
21BATHE Useful for Eliciting Psychosocial Context
- Background
- What is going on in your life?
- Affect
- How do you feel about what is going on?
- Trouble
- What about the situation troubles you the most?
- Handling
- How are you handling that? - provides direction
for intervention. - Empathy
- That must be very difficult for you. -
legitimizes patients feelings.
22Breaking the Language Barriers
- Use of trained certified medical interpreters.
- Discharge instructions in a language preferred by
the patient. Written materials developed in other
languages. - Serving patients in their primary language
including notices, etc. - Signage and Way-finding to help reduce stress
and facilitate timely care. - Develop written language assistance plans.
- Making sure to take the time needed to
communicate as bilingual interviewing takes
longer.
23Basic Strategies
- Speak clearly and slowly without raising your
voice, avoiding slang, jargon, humor, idioms. - Use Mrs., Miss or Mr., avoid first names which
may be considered discourteous in some cultures. - Avoid gestures - they may have a negative
connotation - Sign Language is not mutually understandable.
- Some individuals believe illness is caused by
supernatural or by environmental factors like
cold air. Do not dismiss as they play an
important role in some peoples lives. - Many carry or wear religious symbols - sacred
threads worn by Hindus, native Americans -
medicine bundles.
24Limited English Proficiency (LED)
- Determine Language needs at the point of contact.
- A wide variety of language interpreters (170
languages) are available through Language Line
Services. - Using phone interpreters
- Confidentiality - private room with a speaker
phone if able. - Setting the Stage summarize the situation to
patient and service. - Time Constraints - plan ahead with questions and
allow for extra time. - On-site interpreters
- Position Interpreter beside patient facing you.
- Address patient directly, not interpreter - ask
interpreter to speak in first person so he/she
can melt into the background. - Family members as translators is least desirable
option as it can result in an error, such as,
lack of knowledge, biases, selective
communi-cation. They should NOT be used unless it
is an urgent matter and by no means involve a
minor to interpret.
25Language Line Information
- Phone units are available in the gym and at the
nurses station. - Tell the patient that the interpreter will
translate everything they say so they (and you )
must stop after every few sentences. - When speaking or listening, watch the patient,
adding your own gestures, visual aides and
examples, as applicable. - Repeat information more than once and make sure
the patient understands by having them it explain
it themselves.
26Language Line Quick Reference Guide
27Bridging the Gap Applying Your Knowledge
- RHFW Resources - numerous resource materials
available in the case management office. - Internet Resources - lots of sites for
leadership, data collection, working with
interpreter, training and toolkits, competencies
for interpreters and translating materials into
other languages. - Community Resources - we can learn about
communities we serve and their health seeking
behaviors and attitudes through a variety of
resources locally. - Office Environment - strive for continued
improvement - Develop training and appropriately tailored
care-giving. - Perform self-audits/look back at how we can
continue to improve. - Ask staff to assist with designing ways to
provide a supporting and encouraging environment. - Provide staff with enriching experiences about
the role of cultural diversity.
28The Joint Commission
- The Joint Commission has provided hospitals with
a road map for advancing effective communication,
cultural competence and patient-family centered
care. - Efforts to provide effective communication must
be in place so that patients can participate
responsibly in their care. - To be culturally competent, the RHFW and our
staff must do the following value diversity,
assess themselves, manage dynamics of difference,
acquire and formalize cultural knowledge and
adapt to diversity and the cultural contexts of
individuals, families and the people we serve.
29Patient and Family Centered Care
- In respecting and protecting patient rights, the
hospital should actively involve patients and
families in the care process, encouraging
questions and discussion. - Patientfamily centered care is an approach to
care that involves whomever the patient desires
to participate in care planning and health care
decisions. - The hospital should allow a family member, friend
or other individual to be present with the
patient for emotional support, comfort, to
alleviate fear, for safety or to support patient
wishes during the course of the stay. This does
not dictate visiting hours but encourages us to
look at patient needs. - Read more about patient-family centered care in
Planetree literature _at_www.planetree.org. This
model supports the patient and family as active
participants in care and decision making and
focuses on a healing environment for staff,
patients and families.
30Partial Check List from The Joint Commission
- Admissions Identify preferred language for
discussing health care, if help is needed to
complete admission paperwork and communicate
unique patient needs to the care team - Assessment Identify patient cultural, religious
or spiritual beliefs or practices, dietary needs
that influence care, support the patients
ability to understand and act on health
information. - Treatment Provide patient education that meets
patient needs, involve patients and families in
the care process. - End of Life Make sure that patient has access
to his or her chosen support system and that
needs for end of life are met.
31The Joint Commission Checklist Contd.
- Discharge and Transfer Provide discharge
instructions that meet patient needs and ensure
that follow-up providers can meet unique patient
needs. - Organization Readiness
- Leadership Commitment and Integration of
cultural competence in policy and procedure. - Data Collection and Use Assessment of efforts
to meet unique patient needs and data to look at
population demographics. - Workforce Increase pool of diverse and
bilingual candidates, ensure competency of those
providing language services. - Provision of care, treatment and services
Create an environment that is inclusive of all
patients and provide language services. - Patient, Family and Community Engagement
Collect feedback and share information about the
hospitals efforts to meet unique patient needs. -
32The Asian American Patient
- Diverse population - Chinese, Filipino,
Vietnamese, Korean, Japanese. - Traditional Asian Definition of Causes of Illness
is based on harmony expressed as a balance of
hot and cold states or elements. - Practices
- Coining - coin dipped in mentholated oil is
rubbed across skin to release excess force from
the body. - Cupping - heated glasses placed on skin to draw
out bad force. - Steaming.
- Herbs.
- Chinese Medical Practices acupuncture.
- Norms about touchhead is highest part of body
and should not be touched. - Modesty highly valued.
- Communication based on respect, familiarity is
unacceptable.
33Burmese Refugees
- As of 2000, most of the estimated 20-30,000
Burmese living in the U.S. were immigrants of
religiously, ethnically and linguistically
diverse populations (150 separate sub-groups).
Buddhists comprise 89 of the population. - Burma is one of 22 countries with a high burden
of TB. - Burma has one of the worst health systems in the
world. - In the past two years, Burmese refugees have
settled in Syracuse, Phoenix, Minneapolis, Dallas
and Ft. Wayne - many from rural villages. - Challenging population to work with because of
history of persecution and mistrust of the
government. - Burmese culture may be described as a more
collectively-oriented, favoring indirect, nuance
style communication. - Discuss communication with interpreter and
involve cultural bridge if possible.
34Burmese Refugees Contd.
- Burmese traditional medicine is based on the
classical health care system of India where
health is related to interactions between - The physical body.
- Spiritual elements.
- Natural world.
- Dat system Wind, Fire, Water, Earth and Ether
elements - Illness is considered an psychological imbalance
until final stages when it is classified as a
disease. - Burmese spiritualism linked with beliefs about
cause, progression and treatment of illness. - Treatment may incorporate spiritual healing and
exorcism of ghosts, witches, demons and nets. - Muslim Burmese may use amulets - a verse based on
Muslim Numerology and Burmese Astrology written
on paper and tied up tightly with a thread and
worn about a part of the body. - Karen Practitioners diagnose disease by wrist
pulses and examining face and eyes.
35Amish Society
- There are four groups of Amish
- Swartzentruber and Andy Weave Amish practice
strict shunning and are ultra-conservative in
their use of technology. - Old Order Amish is the largest group with little
or no modern technology. - Beachy Amish practice more relaxed discipline.
- New Order Amish have liberal views but high moral
standards. - Life is given and taken by God.
- Disability is feared more than death.
- Elderly ration care during end of life to not
burden the community or churchs resources. - Usually dont have health insurance as it is
considered a worldly product the community comes
together to pay costs. - Speak to both husband and wife - partners in
family life.
36Amish Society contd.
- Basic Rules
- More health professionals will come in contact
with Amish population - growing population. - Beliefs and behaviors are specific to the
particular church district of which they are a
member. - Amish consider health care preferences from a
holistic view - skill as well as their
relationship and reputation with Amish patients
count. - Amish will continue to change as will their
culture.
37Amish Health Beliefs
- Powwowing - physical manipulation/therapeutic
touch - draws illness from body. - Illness endured with faith and patience.
- Technology in the hospital for treatment is
generally accepted. - Belief in fate is common/recognize external locus
of control. - Three generational family structure - they care
for their elderly. - Photographs are not permitted mirrors are not
permitted.
38Hispanic Health Beliefs and Practices
- Preventative care may not be practiced.
- Illness is Gods will and recovery is in His
hands. - Hot and Cold Principles apply.
- Expressiveness of pain is culturally acceptable.
- Family may not want terminally ill told as it
prevents enjoyment of life left. - Being overweight may be seen as a sign of good
health and well being. - Diet is high in salt, sugar, starches and fat.
- High respect for authority and the elderly.
- Provide same sex caregivers if at all possible.
39Asian Indian
- Health encompasses three governing principles in
the body - Vata - energy and creativity.
- Pitta - optimal digestion.
- Kapha - strength, stamina and immunity.
- Herbal medicines and treatments may be used.
- Modesty and personal hygiene are highly valued.
- Right hand is believed to be clean (religious
books and eating utensils) left hand dirty
(handling genitals). - Stoic/value self control observe non verbal
behavior for pain. - Husband primary decision maker and spokesman for
family.
40Asian Indian Contd.
- Courtesy and self-control are highly valued.
- Close family units may desire to stay in hospital
and be included in personal care of the patient. - Very important to provide privacy after death for
religious rites. - Generally vegetarians. Beef is forbidden.
- Fasting is significant and crucial to consider in
diet teaching. - Many clients are lactose-intolerant.
41New and Emerging Knowledge
- Cultural Competency Development is a Journey
not a goal. It is a process in which one becomes
aware of, appreciative of and sensitive to the
values, beliefs, practices, and problem-solving
strategies used by people of differing cultures - Linking communication to health outcomes can
result in improved communication, patient
satisfaction, adherence, and better care health
outcomes
42Best Wishes!References available upon request