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Respectful Communication

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Title: Respectful Communication


1
Respectful Communication
  • Certain topics are taboo in some cultures. E.g.,
    asking an older Latina/Hispanic unmarried woman
    about sex behavior can be considered offensive.
  • You may want to tell the patient that you realize
    that some things are not normally discussed, but
    that it is necessary so that the best care can be
    planned

2
Alternative Complementary Healing
Systems/Techniques
  • Latino/Hispanic alternative and complementary
    healing systems or techniques include
    Curanderismo, Espiritismo, and Santeria.
  • Healers include
  • Curanderos (general practitioners of Mexican folk
    healing)

3
Alternative Complementary Healing
Systems/Techniques
  • Espiritistas (Puerto Rican faith healers)
  • Santeros (Cuban faith healers)
  • Yerbistas (herbalists)
  • Sobadores (massage therapists)
  • Folk healers often treat children for conditions
    such as

4
Alternative Complementary Healing
Systems/Techniques
  • Colico (colic)
  • Empacho (locked bowels)
  • Susto (fright)
  • Mal de ojo (evil eye)
  • Caida de la mollera (fallen fontanel)

5
Alternative Complementary Healing
Systems/Techniques
  • Healers also perform spiritual cleansing
    (barridas or limpias).
  • Insufficient data exists regarding the extent to
    which alternative and complementary healers and
    systems are used by Hispanics
  • Villa, M.L., Cuellar, J., Gamel, N., Yeo, G.
    (1993). Aging and Health Hispanic American
    Elders (2nd edition), SGEC Working Paper Series,
    Number 5, Ethnogeriatric Reviews, Stanford
    Geriatric Education Center.

6
Latino Health Care Gaps
  • Compared with non Latino whites, Latinos are
    three times as likely to be uninsured.
  • Many have no regular source of primary care,
    receive fewer check-ups, cancer screenings and
    other preventive services. They rely heavily on
    sporadic and emergency room care.
  • As a result of late diagnosis, breast cancer is
    the leading cause of cancer death among Latinas.
  • National Cancer Institute, Cancer Net, Breast
    Cancer Facts, 1999

7
Hispanic/Latinos Double burden
  • Doty and Ives have extensively documented Latinos
    Double burden
  • 1) Limited English proficiency (LEP)
  • 2) Lack of health insurance
  • Together, the double burden can be a death
    sentence
  • Doty, M. and Ives, B. Quality of Health Care for
    Hispanic Populations Findings from the
    Commonwealth Fund 2001 Health Care Quality
    Survey.Commonwealth Fund (March 2002), Pub 526.

8
English-only Healthcare Providers
  • In the US, providers tend to be monolingual --
    English only.
  • And/or have insufficient knowledge of Spanish and
    lack awareness of medically relevant aspects of
    culture
  • Latino patient and Anglo provider have
    communication gap, and different worldviews

9
Evaluating Effective Communication
  • Providers should evaluate whether questions or
    instructions given to LEP patients have been
    understood
  • To be polite, some Hispanic/Latino patients will
    nod yes but not really comprehend.

10
Nonverbal Communication
  • Much of communication between people is
    nonverbal. One must learn it to be able to truly
    communicate
  • However, Nonverbal Communication is rarely a part
    of Foreign Language training in the higher
    education system

11
Nonverbal communication
  • Nonverbal communication is the sum of
    non-linguistic messages that are encoded and
    decoded through
  • Gestures
  • Facial expressions
  • Eye contact
  • Tone of voice
  • Pauses, silences

12
Communication gaps
  • Cultural, linguistic, and nonlinguistic gaps can
    lead to miscommunication and mistrust.
  • Health care personnel must be trained in cross
    cultural assessment and in both the verbal and
    nonverbal aspects of communication

13
Two-way communication ethical imperative
  • To prevent poor health outcomes for
    Hispanic/Latinos and to lighten their double
    burden
  • Efforts to improve the quality of Anglo-Latino
    communication in health care settings are ethical
    imperatives.

14
Translation vs. Cultural Adaptation
  • Health messages and patient education documents
    should be not only linguistically translated but
    also culturally adapted.
  • Straight translation into Spanish has many
    limitations.
  • Cultural adaptation is a more effective method to
    achieve health promotion.

15
Conceptual equivalence
  • In translation, conceptual equivalence is more
    important than linguistic equivalence
  • Health behavior modification approaches must be
    culturally appropriate to be effective

16
Latinos in Columbus Health gaps
  • Uninsured Latinos in Columbus report job-related
    injuries, trauma, diabetes, hypertension,
    allergies, need for birth control, skin rash and
    other conditions
  • Often they can not afford to take time away from
    work to go to a doctor during the day
  • Source State of La Clinica Latina A First Year
    Report Raquel Diaz-Sprague, PharmD MS MLHR,
    January 29, 2002

17
Latinos in Columbus Health Care Gaps
  • As Latinos are the least paid workers, and the
    least insured, they can not afford the cost of a
    primary care medical consultation or to buy the
    prescriptions they need to control chronic
    diseases or conditions such as allergies, asthma,
    diabetes, and hypertension

18
Latinos in Columbus Health gaps
  • Traumatic injuries sometimes are left unattended
    resulting in irreparable losses.
  • E.g., Marcos, a 48 year old Mexican construction
    worker was opening a door by hammering on a
    concrete wall on a Tuesday afternoon

19
Latinos in Columbus Health gaps
  • A piece of concrete flew into his right eye. He
    felt like he was bleeding but no blood was coming
    from the eye. The pain was acute. His foreman
    examined him, told him its nothing gave him
    Tylenol and told him to keep working or hell be
    fired

20
Latinos in Columbus Health gaps
  • Marcos kept taking Tylenol and kept working with
    eye pain for 5 days.
  • The foreman finally took him to an emergency room
    on Sunday evening
  • He had an emergency operation to remove a metal
    piece from the eye.

21
Latinos in Columbus Health gaps
  • The operation cost 2000. He gave the hospital
    all he had, 400.
  • The foreman refused to help pay. The hospital
    refused to do follow up care. He needs an
    operation to correct the eye muscles. He cant be
    scheduled for lack of resources for payment.
  • He has lost 95 vision in that eye.

22
Mistaken Identities Fear Factor
  • Some Latinos are putting off going to a doctor
    because of fear they will be asked to show
    papers. They may or may not have legal papers.
  • They may be using someone elses papers with a
    different name and a different date of birth.

23
Bridging the Gaps
  • In 2000 HHS published guidelines Cultural and
    Linguistically Appropriate Services (CLAS) urging
    providers to
  • Provide qualified interpreters.
  • Provide written materials in the patients
    language

24
Nearly 45 Million Uninsured
  • Nearly 45 million Americans 15.6 of the U.S.
    population did not have health insurance during
    a typical month in 2003.
  • This represents an increase of 5 million people
    and more than 1 percent of the population since
    1990
  • Source "Protecting the Protecting the Uninsured
    Kenneth E. Thorpe, Ph.D.
  • New England Journal of Medicine October 6, 2004
  • Volume 351 October 7, 2004 Number 15
  • http//content.nejm.org/

25
Health care -- a human right
  • Lack of access to care for the working poor and
    the 45 million uninsured in the US - the richest
    nation on earth - is an ethical issue requiring
    action response.
  • Lack of access to health care puts people at risk
    for severe conditions that could have been
    effectively managed when diagnosed and treated at
    an early stage.

26
Helping Latinos in Columbus
  • Many new Hispanic/Latino immigrants have unmet
    primary health care needs. Most are uninsured,
    have little financial resources and rely on
    episodic or emergency care.
  • From 1999-2002, I led a group of volunteers as
    Chair of Latino Health Alliance and Founding
    Director of La Clinica Latina. The clinic
    currently operates for about 3 hours 2 or 3
    nights a month. It is funded by the OSU Medical
    Center. The staff is all volunteer.

27
La Clinica Latina
  • Mission of La Clinica Latina
  • To educate Latinos in Columbus on health care
    issues and provide free primary care in a
    bilingual and bicultural atmosphere.

28
La Clinica Latina (cont.)
  • The clinic opened on December 19, 2000. An
    8-month old boy presenting a leg burn was the
    first patient. The burn was caused by a chemical
    gel leaking from a cheap diaper. He was treated
    and recovered quickly. We fell in love with him.
    His parents were so very grateful.
  • La Clinica provided 727 patient visits to 320
    patients in 2001.
  • Source State of La Clinica Latina A First Year
    Report
  • Raquel Diaz-Sprague, PharmD MS MLHR, January 29,
    2002

29
La Clinica Latina Reception Area(snapshot taken
in 2002)
30
Educating Health Providers Medical Communication
with Latinos (AMP 641)
  • AMP 641 evolved from a minimodule in the Medical
    Humanities Program for MEDI and MEDII.
  • Course offered Spring Quarter open to students
    in any college.
  • AMP 641 is included in the Latino/a Studies
    curriculum of the College of Humanities, Division
    of Comparative Ethnic Studies.

31
Medical Communication with Latinos (AMP 641)
  • The course provides instruction on medical
    terminology, cultural adaptation in translation,
    medically relevant aspects of Hispanic/Latino
    culture, service learning
  • Permission of Instructor is required. Instructor
    Raquel Diaz-Sprague, PharmD
  • Contact diaz-sprague.1_at_osu.edu

32
Thoughts and Reflection
  • Almost one in 6 people in the US lacks health
    insurance. The number of uninsured is growing as
    costs escalate.
  • The nation must end this health injustice.
    Creative solutions to provide access to health
    care for all are needed. It is an ethical
    imperative.

33
Thoughts and Reflection
  • Charitable free clinics while providing a
    wonderful and noble service can do little to
    alleviate the US health care access crisis.
  • Expanding a network of free or low-cost clinics,
    is at best a bandage over a deep, festering
    wound.
  • Universal coverage is needed

34
Final Thought and Reflection
  • The inhumanity of slavery in the US could not
    have been ended by expanding emancipation, but by
    abolishing the institution of slavery!
  • So must this nation abolish, for all time to
    come, the inhumanity of lack of health care
    coverage built in the US healthcare system.
  • Will we join the civilized world?
  • Source Intercultural Understanding and
    Communication Can Help Bridge Health Gaps for
    Latinos Presentation by Raquel Diaz-Sprague,
    American Association for Practical and
    Professional Ethics, 13th Annual Meeting.,
    February 27, 2004
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