Title: Culture Care Diversity and Universality
1Culture Care Diversity and Universality
- A Theory of Nursing
- By Dr. M Leininger
2Central Purpose of the Theory
- To discover and explain diverse and universal
culturally based care factors influencing the
health, well being , illness or death of
individuals or groups
3Goal of Nursing
- To give culturally congruent care
- To discover the meanings and ways to give care to
people with different values
4Goal of Nursing
- To promote well-being, growth development,
healthly lifestyles and recovery from illness - To work function effectively with people having
different values, beliefs, and ideas about
nursing, health, caring, wellness, illness, death
disability
5Assumptive Premises of the Theory
- 1. Care is the essence of nursing and a distinct,
dominant, central and unifying focus. - 2.Care (caring) is essential for well-being,
health, growth, survival and to face handicaps or
death. - 3. Culturally based care is the broadest holistic
means to know, explain, interpret and predict
nursing care phenomena and to guide nursing
decisions and actions
6Assumptive Premises of the Theory
- 4. Nursing is a transcultural humanistic and
scientific care discipline and profession with
the central purpose of serving individuals,
groups, communities or institutions worldwide. - 5. Care (caring) is essential to curing and
healing, for there can be no curing without caring
7Assumptive Premises of the Theory
- 6. Culture care concepts, meanings, expressions,
patterns, processes, and structural forms of care
vary transculturally with diversities and some
universalities - 7. Every human culture has generic (lay, folk or
indigenous) care knowledge and practices which
vary transculturally
8Assumptive Premises of the Theory
- 8. Culture care values, beliefs, and practices
are influenced by and tend to be imbedded in the
worldview, language, philosophy, religion (and
spirituality), kinship, social, political, legal,
educational, economic, technological,
ethnohistorical, and environmental context of
cultures
9Assumptive Premises of the Theory
- 9. Beneficial, healthy and satisfying
culturally-based care influences the health and
well-being of individuals, families, groups, and
communities within their environmental context - 10. Culturally congruent or beneficial nursing
care can only occur when individual, group,
family, community, or institutional care values,
expressions, or patterns are known and used
explicitly in appropriate and meaningful ways
10Assumptive Premises of the Theory
- 11. Culture care differences and similarities
between professionals and client participants
exists in all human cultures worldwide - 12 Culture conflicts, imposition practices,
cultural stresses and pain reflect the lack
of professional care knowledge to - provide culturally congruent, responsible,
- and sensitive care
- 13. The ethnonursing qualitative research method
provides an important means to discover and
accurately interpret emic and etic embedded,
complex and diverse culture care factors
11Orientational Theory Definitions
- 1. Care
- 2. Culture
- 3. Culture care
- 4. Culture care diversity
- 5. Culture care universality
- 6. Worldview
- 7. Cultural social structure dimensions
12Orientational Theory Definitions
- 8. Environmental context
- 9. Ethnohistory
- 10. Emic
- 11. Etic
- 12. Health
- 13. Nursing
13Orientational Theory Definitions
- 14. Culture care preservation or maintenance
- 15. Culture care accommodation or negotiation
- 16. Culture care repatterning or restructuring
- 17. Culturally congruent nursing care
14Relational Statements or Hypotheses
- Identifiable differences in caring values and
behaviours between and among cultures lead to
differences in the nursing care expectations of
careseekers
15Relational Statements or Hypotheses
- As professional nurses work in strange
cultures with different values about nursing care
or caring behaviours, there will be overt signs
of cultural conflicts and problems
16Relational Statements or Hypotheses
- The greater the dependence of nursing personnel
on technological tasks and activities, the
greater the signs of interpersonal distance and
the fewer the client satisfactions
17Relational Statements or Hypotheses
- Cultures that highly value individualism with
independence modes will show signs of self-care
practices and values whereas cultures that do
not value individualism with independence modes
will show limited signs of self-care practices
and more signs of other care practices
18Relational Statements or Hypotheses
- Clients from different cultures can identify
caring and noncaring behaviours and attitudes of
nurses
19Relational Statements or Hypotheses
- Symbolic forms and ritual functions of nursing
care behaviours and practices have different
meanings and outcomes in different cultures
20Relational Statements or Hypotheses
- Where there is marked evidence of nurturant
caring behaviours or the use of culture-specific
care constructs, there will be more signs of well
being or health and fewer signs of illness
21Ethnonursing Research
- A qualitative nursing research method focused
on naturalistic, open discoveries and largely
inductive modes to document, describe explain
interpret informants worldviews, meanings,
symbols and life experiences as they bear upon
actual or potential nursing phenomena
22Ethnonursing Research
- This method supports the goal to become as
knowledgeable as possible about the informants
emic worldview but also remain attentive to etic
knowledge related to world view, professional
attitudes, biases, racial and gender views.
23Purpose of Ethnonursing Research
- To discover largely unknown or vaguely known
phenomena bearing upon nursing knowledge - To enter peoples world with an open mind and
learn from them about their lifeways, experiences
and current or past perspectives
24Purpose of Ethnonursing Research
- To study how outsiders views contrast with the
local culture and areas of conflict and need - To gain in-depth knowledge about the meanings,
expressions, symbols, metaphors and practices
related to care, health, human life, human
conditions - To be able to gently tease out covert or embedded
care and nursing knowledge related to the theory
of cultural care with the different dimensions
depicted in the sunrise model
25Purpose of Ethnonursing Research
- To discover ways to obtain accurate, credible,
confirmable, meaningful data which reflects
mainly the informants cultural lifeways and
insights about health well being. - To identify knowledge that is diverse or similar
about human care and health along with other
knowledge and experiences influencing care and
health in different life contexts
26Enablers
- Leiningers observation-participation-reflection
enabler - Leiningers stranger to trusted friend enabler
- Leiningers acculturation enabler
- Specific enabler r/t domain of inquiry
27Scope
- Leiningers scope is broad to include worldwide
care - She includes care/caring beyond the interpersonal
level to include families, groups cultures. - She is searching for worldwide human meanings
28Scope
- Theory has multiple levels of scope dealing with
human cultures and nursing worldwide - Broad macro level (etic analysis)
- Middle range (emic analysis)
- Concrete empirical level
- Sunrise model pictorially depicts the multiple
theoretical levels
29Scope
- Selected care constructs are suitable worldwide
and in any clinical situation. - Other research has been given direction from her
conceptual model - 90 cultures in Western and non-Western worlds
have been studied with the theory and 185 care
constructs have been identified
30Top Ten Reasons to Use Leiningers Theory of
Nursing
- 10. You can participate in and publish an
ethnonursing qualitative research study
31Top Ten Reasons to Use Leiningers Theory of
Nursing
- 9. You can eliminate the phrases nursing
intervention and patient problems from your
vocabulary since these terms may be viewed as a
cultural imposition
32Top Ten Reasons to Use Leiningers Theory of
Nursing
- 8. You get to spend quality time with fellow
nurse theorists
33Top Ten Reasons to Use Leiningers Theory of
Nursing
- 7. You can use the Sunrise Model as a cognitive
map to tease out emic or etic phenomena in
different historical, cultural, and environmental
contexts
34Top Ten Reasons to Use Leiningers Theory of
Nursing
- 6. You can become a clinical nurse specialist in
transcultural nursing in the culture of your
choice
35Top Ten Reasons to Use Leiningers Theory of
Nursing
- 5. You will have a systemic and focused way to
develop new knowledge and insights from examining
the worldview, social structure factors,
environmental contexts, ethnohistory and language
usage of different cultures
36Top Ten Reasons to Use Leiningers Theory of
Nursing
- 4. You can attend conferences in far away exotic
places
37Top Ten Reasons to Use Leiningers Theory of
Nursing
- 3. The theory will expand nurses thinking from a
unicultural to a multicultural, holistic and
comparative perspective
38Top Ten Reasons to Use Leiningers Theory of
Nursing
- 2. You can establish a Transcultural Nursing
Society chapter in a town near you.
Dr. A Page President, Great Lakes
Chapter Transcultural Nursing Society
39Top Ten Reasons to Use Leininger
- 1. You will provide culturally congruent care
that fits reasonably with clients needs and
realities
40COMING NEXT WEEK
THE BOOK CLUB FEATURING DR. M. LEININGERS
THEORY OF CULTURE CARE DIVERSITY AND UNIVERSALITY