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Multicultural Opportunities for Success in Hospital Services

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Definition ... a specific set of social, shared, educational, religious, and ... much entwined with ethnicity, shaper of health values, beliefs, and practices. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Multicultural Opportunities for Success in Hospital Services


1
Multicultural Opportunities for Success in
Hospital Services
  • Hedi Aguiar RN, BA(Hons), CCRN
  • Hospital Communications Specialist
  • OneLegacy

2
Questions to Run on
  • Should Hospital Services staff be trained in
    multicultural sensitivity and what focus should
    the training have?
  • How can we ensure that Hospital Services staff
    are addressing multicultural needs in their
    hospitals?

3
Break Down the Walls and Boundaries
4
Commitment
  • Learn from each other
  • Share our cultures with each other to maximize
    our learning experience
  • Do not look down on or try to offend each others
    culture
  • Be curious of each other and ask questions
  • When being asked about your culture, know it is
    coming from a place of genuine interest and
    wanting to learn
  • If an assumption is being made about your
    culture, gently redirect.

5
Indonesia My Homeland
6
Sleeping on the Floor
7
Eating with our Hands
8
Carrying Kids
9
Two Monkeys ?
10
Playing and Entertaining
11
Objectives
  • By the end of this presentation the audience will
  • be able to
  • Recognize the need for a training program for
    Health Care Professionals (HCPs) on multicultural
    sensitivity and adaptation
  • Recognize the need for Hospital Services staff to
    be trained in multicultural sensitivity and
    adaptation
  • Be more culturally aware

12
Overview
  • Working definitions of culture, race and
    ethnicity
  • Hospital Services role in working with HCPs
    dealing with potential donor families of various
    cultures
  • Hospital Services need for multicultural
    sensitivity training in dealing with HCPs of
    various cultural backgrounds
  • Practical tips in working with different cultures

13
Working Definitions
  • Culture is requires a broad definition and so it
    should include
  • Ethnographic variables (e.g., nationality,
    ethnicity, language, and religion)
  • Demographic variables (e.g., age, gender, place
    of residence, and generation)
  • Status variables (e.g., social, economic, and
    education)
  • Affiliation variables (e.g. formal and informal
    group memberships) (Friedman et al, 2003)

14
Definition of Culture
  • Culture is defined as a specific set of social,
    shared, educational, religious, and professional
    behaviors, practices and values that individuals
    learn and ascribe to while participating in or
    outside of groups with whom they typically
    interact.
  • (Bomar, 2004)

15
Definition of Ethnicity
  • Ethnicity
  • is a key facet of culture and refers to a common
    ancestry, a sense of peoplehood and group
    identity. From a common ancestry and a shared
    social and cultural history and national origin
    have evolved shared values and customs. (Giger
    Davidhizer, 1999, McGoldrick, 1993)

16
Definition of Race
  • Race
  • is an ancient, nonscientific, political
    classification of human beings and is based on
    physiological characteristics, such as skin
    color, eye shape, and texture of hair.
    (Melville, 1988)
  • It is a narrower term then ethnicity and denotes
    a human biological definition.

17
Important Clarifications
  • Race and ethnicity should NOT be confused
  • People of one race can vary in terms of their
    ethnicity and culture
  • Race is NOT considered a correct or useful means
    of classifying people
  • There are no distinct, pure races today
  • Religion is very much entwined with ethnicity,
    shaper of health values, beliefs, and practices.

18
Thought Question
  • Knowing that people of one race can vary in terms
    of their ethnicity and culture, can we truly make
    assumptions about someone based on their
    biologically looks or even based on the little we
    may know of their
  • culture or ethnicity?

19
Hospital Services role in Training Health Care
Professionals in Multicultural Sensitivity
Adaptation
20
Why Cultural Competence?
  • Leininger states Nurses are awaking to the
    critical need to become more knowledgeable and
    culturally competent
  • to work with individuals
  • of diverse cultures.
  • (cited by Campinha-Bacote et al, 1996)

21
Culture Assessed by Observation
  • Dress
  • Appearance
  • Speech
  • Educational Background

22
Cultural Issues
  • Identify the Decision Maker
  • Give the family what they need and want
  • Do not project your own personal feelings
  • Assess their readiness let the family guide the
    conversation

23
Motives
  • Understand your motives
  • Concerns for the family
  • Concerns for the recipient
  • Turning a negative situation around to be positive

24
Professional Empowerment
  • Hospital Services staff should help nurses to
    understand how to
  • Developed their own interpersonal skills
  • Utilize their strengths
  • Focus on the family
  • Time
  • Taking care of their needs
  • Pick-up on cues from the family
  • Sensibility, sensitivity and adaptation

25
Attitudes in Multicultural Donation
  • Preconceived ideas about cultures
  • African American
  • Filipino
  • Hispanic
  • Asian
  • Religious background
  • Jewish
  • Jehovah Witness
  • Hindu
  • Bias vs. reality

26
Asians - Filipinos
  • Values in Death and Dying
  • Death is a spiritual event, family may want to
    wash the body, will want all the family to say
    good-bye prior to the body being taken
  • Belief in Donation
  • The body is given high respect, cremation is not
    common practice, may not allow donation

27
Asians - Cambodians
  • Values in Death and Dying
  • Monks need to recite prayers, family members
    should be present, family faces death quietly,
    incense may be burned.
  • Belief in Donation
  • Unlikely to allow donation, body cremated, due to
    belief in reincarnation, desire for body to be
    intact

28
Who / What Do You See?
29
Hospital Services Role in Working with Health
Care Professionals ofVarious Cultural Backgrounds
30
Minority Nurses by Ethnicity
  • 4.9 African American
  • 3.7 Asian or Pacific Islander
  • 2.0 Hispanic
  • 0.5 American Indian or Alaska Native
  • 1.2 Multiracial
  • 1996-2000 Number of minority RNs increased by
    35 vs. 2 of non-minority RNs

31
Supporting Research
  • Minimal supporting research for this topic
  • Some research attitudes toward donation
  • Some research addressing racism in HCPs and
    differential treatment of patients (Racial
    stereotyping and medicine the need for cultural
    competence. H J Geiger
  • Recommendations Education for Health Care
    Professionals / Providers

32
Education Real-Time Hospital Services
  • Opportunity for in-the-moment education
  • Raises questions and concerns
  • Brings to light perceptions
  • Moments for intimate conversations

Win them one-by-one.
33
Research on Why Families Decline
  • In research families who oppose donation are
    often identified as people who
  • have a lack of education
  • who distrust of the healthcare system
  • who fail to communicate
  • who are apathetic
  • who are operating on superstitious or religious
    beliefs

34
Interesting Quote
What is most frustrating then, is to see this
cultural bias of a perceived elite group those
who promote transplants as they express their
views of people who raise very legitimate ethical
questions about organ donation.
35
Be Aware
Unspoken assumptions regarding meaning of
health, illness, and death may affect
communication regarding donation.Dr.
Hawryluck Presentation Cultural Consideration
in Donation
36
Reflection
  • What assumptions were being made in this clip?
  • What were the characters basing their assumptions
    on?
  • Have you ever made an assumptions about someones
    culture / religion / race purely based on their
    looks?
  • Did you ever discover that your assumption was
    completely wrong?

37
Practical Tips to Enhance Cultural Awareness
38
Developing a Multicultural Sensitivity Tool
  • Listen
  • Reading facial expressions
  • Communicate
  • Assess their knowledge
  • Explain process of death
  • Clarify
  • Strategic planning phase
  • Next steps
  • Be prepared
  • Implementation phase
  • Evaluation phase

39
Leiningers 9 Domains for a Cultural Assessment
Tool
  • Patterns of lifestyle
  • Specific cultural values and norms
  • Cultural taboos and myths
  • World view and ethnocentric tendencies
  • General features that client perceives as
    different or similar to other cultures
  • Health and life care rituals and rites of passage
    to maintain health
  • Degree of cultural change
  • Caring and behaviors
  • Folk and professional health-illness systems that
    are used

40
Risk of Cultural Imposition
  • The nurse must examine his/her biases and
    prejudices toward other cultures as well as
    explore his/her own cultural background. Without
    becoming aware of the influence of ones own
    cultural values, a risk exist for nurse to engage
    in cultural imposition. (Campinha-Bacote et al
    1996)

41
Tips - Reflections
  • Understand yourself
  • What is your culture? Your beliefs?
  • Has your culture and beliefs been influenced by
    your family? Has it evolved?
  • If you have changed your perspectives, what led
    you to change your perspectives?

Reflect. Know yourself.
42
Tips - Practicalities
  • Do not assume you know the culture
  • Seek to understand
  • Dont be afraid to ASK!
  • Become a student of the person / the family
  • Identify what provides value in death to that
    individual

Your culture is not superior.
43
In Conclusion
  • Beginning thoughts and discussions of
    multicultural needs within HS
  • Empowerment to begin the journey of becoming more
    multicultural sensitive and not be afraid
  • Recommended further exploration of these
    perspectives

44
Questions to Run On
  • Should Hospital Services staff be trained in
    multi-cultural sensitivity?
  • How can we ensure that Hospital Services staff
    are addressing multi-cultural needs in their
    hospitals?

45
Thank you for your attention!
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