Title: Client Care Delivery and Cultural Competence
1Client Care Delivery and Cultural Competence
- NRS 320
- Foundations of Nursing Practice
- Peggy Korman CNM
2Nursing Care Delivery Systems
- Provide structure for delivering care
- Assess care needs
- Formulate plan of care
- Implement plan
- Evaluate clients responses
3Challenges of Delivery Systems
- Effectiveness
- Cost efficiency
- Quality
- Needs of consumers practitioners
4Functional Nursing
- RNs, LPNs and UAPs are assigned different tasks
- RNs assess clients
- Other staff give baths, make beds,take vital
signs, administer treatments
5Functional Nursing
- Advantages
- Staff becomes efficient at performing assigned
tasks - Disadvantages
- Uneven continuity
- Lack of holistic understanding of patient
- Problems with follow-up
6Team Nursing
- Team of nursing personnel provides total care to
a group of patients - RN leads team that may include other RNs, LPNs,
and UAPs - Team leaders must be skilled in delegating,
problem solving, communicating - All members of effective teams are good
communicators
7Team/Modular Nursing
8Team Nursing
- Disadvantages
- Time needed for communicating, supervising, and
coordinating team members - Effect of changes in team leaders, members and
assignments on continuity of care - Total patient not considered by any one person
- Role confusion and resentment
- Less control for nurses over assignment
- Possibility of unequal assignments
9Team Nursing
- Advantages
- LPNs and UAPs perform tasks that dont require
RNs expertise - Care is more easily coordinated
- Saves steps and time
10Total Patient Care
- RN is responsible for all aspects of care for one
or more patients
11Total Patient Care
12Total Patient Care
- Advantages
- Continuous, holistic, expert nursing care
- Total accountability
- Continuity of communication
- Disadvantages
- RNs perform tasks that could be done more cost
effectively by less skilled persons
13Primary Nursing
- RN designs, implements, and is responsible for
nursing care for duration of the patients stay
on the unit
14Primary Nursing
Other health care providers
Charge Nurse
PRIMARY NURSE
Patient
Associate Nurse
Associate Nurse
15Primary Nursing
- Advantages
- Knowledge-based practice model
- Decentralization of decisions, authority, and
responsibility - 24-hour accountability
- Improved continuity and coordination of care
- Increased nurse, patient, and physician
satisfaction
16Primary Nursing
- Disadvantages
- Excellent communication required
- Accountability of associate nurses
- Patient transfers disrupt continuity of care
- Compensation and legal responsibility for staff
nurses - Unwillingness of associates to take direction
17Practice Partnerships
- RN and partner (UAP, LPN, or less experienced RN)
work together on same schedule with same group of
patients
RN
Partner
Patients
18Practice Partnerships
- Advantages
- Improved continuity of care
- Disadvantages
- Decreased ratio of RNs to nonprofessional staff
- Potential for junior team members to assume too
much responsibility
19Case Management
- Case manager supervises care provided by licensed
and unlicensed personnel - Critical pathways provide direction for managing
care of specific patients
20Case Management
Case Manager
Patient caseload
Caregivers
Caregivers
Caregivers
21Differentiated Practice
- Structure of roles and functions differentiated
by nurses education, experience and competence - Roles, responsibilities and tasks defined for
professional nurses and UAP
22Patient-Centered Care
- Nurse coordinates team of multifunctional,
unit-based caregivers - All patient care services are unit based
- Focus is decentralization, promotion of
efficiency and quality cost control
23Clinical Microsystems
- Small unit of care that maintains itself
- Dynamic, interactive, self-aware and
interdependent - Proven to improve teamwork, communication and
continuity of care
24Other Innovative Systems of Care
- Segmenting hospital into smaller units
- Primary Care Team Model
- Collaborative Patient Care Team Model
- Transitional Care Model
- Hospital at Home Model
25Using the System Effectively
- Communication skills
- Ability to delegate
- Problem-solving skills
26Cultural Competence
27What is Culture?
- Leninger (1985) describes culture as
- the values, beliefs, norms, and practices of a
particular group that are learned and shared and
that guide thinking, decisions and actions in a
patterned way - Or more simply the luggage each of us carries
around for our lifetime (Spector, 2003)
28Culture determines.
- Who is healthy ill
- What people think causes health illness
- What healers are sought to prevent and treat
disease - What treatments are used
- Appropriate sick role behavior
- How long a person is sick when he/she has
recovered
29Culture and Linguistic Competence
- The ability of health care providers and health
care organizations to understand and respond
effectively to the cultural and linguistic needs
brought by the patient to the health care
encounter - U.S. Department of Health Human Services, 2003
30Cultural Competence
- Cultural Awareness
- Cultural Knowledge Skill
- Cultural Encounter
31Cultural Competence
- Begins with understanding of own self
- Includes knowledge of various cultural
characteristics - Includes an understanding of cultural
characteristics - Requires application of cultural knowledge and
understanding in the healthcare setting
32Nonethnic Cultures
- Sexual Orientation
- Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender
- Occupation Nurses, Military
- Age Adolescence, Elderly
- Socioeconomic status
- Poverty
- The Homeless
- The Affluent/Wealthy
- Handicap/Disability
- Deaf/Hearing Impaired
- Blind/Visually Imapired
33Avoid Stereotyping
- We must not presume that all people of a certain
culture adhere to all aspects of their culture.
The healthcare provider must identify which
aspects are appropriate for each patient during
the admission process
34Cultural Assessment
- Is a systematic appraisal or examination of
individuals, groups, and communities as to their
cultural beliefs, values, practices to
determine explicit needs intervention
practices within the cultural context of the
people being evaluated. - Leininger McFarland, 2006
35Explanatory Models
- Explain why we are sick to other people and to
ourselves to make sense of our misfortune - Example
- You have a terrible cold!
- Youre right-it is because I got run down and
then went outside without a coat yesterday. That
is why Im sick.
36Explanatory Model Questions
- What is the patients ethnic affiliation?
- Who are the patients major support persons and
where do they live? - With whom should we speak about the patients
health or illness? - What are the patients primary and secondary
languages, and speaking and reading abilities? - What is the patients economic situation? Is
income adequate to meet the patients and
familys needs?
37Spirituality and Religion
- Spirituality refers to a subjective experience of
the sacred, whereas religion involves subscribing
to a set of beliefs or doctrines that are
institutionalized
38Major World Religions
39U.S. Religions
40U.S.Religions
- 354,194 Congregations
- 1,200 Denominations
- Yearbook of American Canadian Churches, 2002
41Spiritual and Religious Healers
Bishop
Curanderola
Monk
Shaman
Medicine Man
Rabbi
Elder
Medicine Woman
Priest
42Religion spirituality in healing
- Prayers, Chants
- Pilgrimages
- Fasting
- Amulets or talismans
- Healing rituals
- Annointing with oil
- Sacraments
- Laying on of hands
43Religion, Health, Culture
- Research demonstrates positive health outcomes
for people with strong spiritual and religious
beliefs - Congruent with holistic philosophical beliefs
about human nature - Dietary lifestyle practices often promote
health prevent disease (eg. Lower incidence of
heart disease among Mormons Seventh-day
Adventist) - Guides moral ethical decision making
44Symbols of Ethnoreligious Identity
- Shrines with Buddha, candles, incense and various
artifacts (Buddhist) - Presence of prayer beads (Muslim)
- Amulets and talismans (charms) to ward off
illness or bring good health (Mexican, Puerto
Rican, many African groups) - Rosaries, religious medals, statues, voltive
candles (Catholics) - Presence of mezuzza (small case containing torah
passages on parchment usually hung in doorway)
45Include Religious Spiritual Factors in Cultural
Assessment
- Health-related beliefs practices eg. Diet,
medications, medical surgical procedures - Religious calendar holy days
- Healing practices
- Religious network for providing spiritual
emotional support for sick dying members - Spiritual religious healers
46Religious, Cultural Civic Holidays
- Avoid scheduling medical appointments during
holidays - Avoid disruption to holy days (such as fasting
during Ramadan)
47Promoting Effective Cross-Cultural Communication
- Always ask,
- By what name may I call you?
48What do Limited-English Speakers Want?
- Speaking ones native language is
- Easier when feeling ill
- More comfortable
- More accurate
49What is unsafe with Limited-English speakers?
- Using family members as interpreters
- Recruiting as hoc or untrained interpreters
- Writing instructions in English
- Interpreter errors cause medical errors
- (Levine, JAMA, 2006)
50Why not to use a family member as an interpreter
- Office for Civil Rights (OCR) Policy Guidance
(2000) states that untrained interpreters - May not understand the concepts or official
terminology they are asked to interpret or
translate - Obstruct the flow of confidential information to
the provider - Fail to disclose intimate details of personal and
family life Clinicians too, refrain from candid
discussions with untrained interpreters present
51Requirements in Using a Translator
- Use approved Interpreter Services
- OR
- Use the Interpreter Telephone
52Using Appropriate Interpreter Services in
Clinical Care
- Speak with Charge nurse for assistance
- Call operator to place call
- 1-800 number
- Client code/ID
- Request language
53Directness in Clinical Encounters
- Americans value directness spit it out
- say what is on your mind
- Languages that depend on subtle contextual cues
- infer meaning
- imply, but do not state the point
- (Japanese, Arabic)
54Directness and Subtlety
- Maybe or That would be difficult is probably
a polite no - Avoid yes/no questions
- Phrase your inquiry as a multiple choice question
55Nonverbal Communication
- Facial expressions, body language, tone of
voice play a much greater role in cultures where
people prefer indirect communication talking
around the issue
56Gestures and Facial Expressions
- Another culturally influenced aspect of
communication is the domonstration of emotion,
such as joy, affection, anger, or upset - Most Koreans, for instance, are taught that
laughter frequent smiling make a person appear
unintelligent, so they prefer to wear a serious
expression - While Americans widen their eyes to show anger,
Chinese people narrow theirs - Vietnamese, conversely, consider anger a personal
thing, not to be demonstrated publically
57Gestures
- Smiling and laughter may be signs of
embarrassment confusion on the part of some
Asians - Talking with ones hands is more common in
southern Europe than in northern Europe - A direct stare by an African American or Arab is
not meant as a challenge to your authority, while
dropped eyes may be a sign of respect from Latino
or Asian patients or coworkers
58Gestures
- Use gestures with care, as they can have negative
meanings in other cultures - Thumbs up and the OK sign are obscene gestures
in parts of South America the Mediterranean - Pointing with the index finger and beckoning with
the hand as a come here sign are seen as rude
in some cultures much as snapping ones fingers
at someone would be viewed in the U.S.
59Gestures
- American culture generally expects people to
stand about an arms length apart when talking in
a business situation - Any closer is reserved for more intimate contact
or seen as aggression - In the Middle East, however, it is normal for
people to stand close enough to feel each others
breath on their faces
60Touch
- Different rules about who can be touched where
- A handshake is generally accepted as a standard
greeting in business, yet the kind of handshake
differs. - North American hearty grasp
- Mexico softer hold
- Asia soft handshake with the second hand
brought up under the first is a sign of warmth
and friendship
61Touch
- Religious rules may apply to appropriate touch
- Touching between men women in public is not
permitted by some orthodox religions, so a
handshake would not be appropriate - Ideas about respect are conveyed thru touch
- Touching the head, even tousling a childs hair
as an affectionate gesture, would be considered
offensive by many Asians - If you need to touch someone for purposes of an
examination, explain the purpose procedure
before you begin
62Topics Appropriate for Discussion
- What is acceptable for nurse and patient to
discuss? - Many Asian groups regard feelings as too private
to be shared - Latinos generally appreciate inquiries about
family members, while most - Arabs Asians regard feelings as too personal to
discuss in business situations - In social conversations, Filipinos, Arabs,
Vietnamese might find it completely acceptable to
ask the price you have paid for something or how
much you earn, while most Americans would
consider that behavior rude
63Inappropriate Conversation Topics
- Even a seemingly innocuous comment on the weather
is off limits in the Muslim world, where natural
phenomenal are viewed as Allahs will, not to be
judged by humans - This points to another aspect that relates to
privacy - To many newcomers, Americans seem naively open.
Discretion and purposeful communication help us
judge when to converse and when to be silent
64Privacy
- Discussing personal matters outside the family is
seen as embarrassing by many cultures - Thoughts, feelings problems are kept to oneself
in most groups outside the dominant American
culture - Privacy boundaries may have implications when
medical problems are exacerbated by personal or
family problems
65Saving face
- In Asia, the Middle East, to some extent Latin
America, onnes dignity must be preserved at all
costs - Death is preferred to loss of face in traditional
Japanese culture, hence the suicide ritual,
hara-kiri, as a final way to restore honor - Any embarrassment can lead to loss of face, even
in the dominant American culture - To be criticized in front of others, publicly
snubbed, or fired, would be humiliating in most
cultures - Seemingly harmless behaviors can be demeaning to
some patients
66The Culturally Competent Clinician
- Attitudes of the CCC
- Understanding acknowledging that there can be
differences between our Western and other
cultures healthcare values and practices - Empathy Being sensitive to the feeling of being
different - Patience Understanding the potential differences
between our Western and other cultures concept
of time and immediacy - Ability To laugh with oneself and others
- Trust Investment in building a relationship with
patients, which conveys a commitment to safeguard
their well-being
67Non-Verbal Communication
- All cultures have rules, often unspoken, about
who touches whom, when, and where.
68Nonverbal Communication
- 65 of all communication
- Touch
- Facial expressions
- Eye movements
- Body posture
69Modesty
- Cultural perspectives pts may prefer clinicians
of the same gender - May be taboo for males to examine or treat
females (Middle East) - In some Asian Hispanic cultures, older adults
may believe that hospital gowns cause disease by
exposing them to cold drafts (related to yin/yang
hot/cold theories of disease)
70Pain and Cultural Competence
- Pain is an abstract concept which can be referred
to as - A personal private sensation
- A stimulus that signals harm
- A pattern of behavior to protect from harm
71Pain Experience
- Pain is a universal human experience, but pain
reactions are unique to the individual and
includes thoughts, feelings, reactions,
expectations and past experiences associated with
pain - The experience of pain can also be described in
physiologic, psychological, economic and
spiritual contexts
72What is Included in a Pain Assessment
Cross-Culturally?
- Pain Expression Verbal and non-verbal behaviors,
including gestures and tone of voice - Pain Language Word(s) used to describe pain
- Language or other communication techniques such
as pointing to site of pain - Religious Beliefs Meaning of pain or suffering
- Rituals and taboos associated with pain or pain
treatment
73Barriers
- Typical barriers to a cultural sensative pain
assessment and treatment by healthcare providers
include - Stereotyping
- Lack of empathy
- Ethnocentrism
- Language
- Experience or expertise of practitioner and time
constraints
74Complementary Alternative Medicine
- NIH facilitates research and evaluation of CAM
and practices - Provides information about a variety of methods
75What is CAM?
- Includes a broad range of healing philosophies,
approaches therapies - A therapy is called complementary when it is used
in addition to conventional biomedical/scientifici
treatments - An alternative therapy is used instead of
conventional biomedical/scientific treatment
76C A Therapies
77(No Transcript)
78Complementary TherapiesWhat is the Clinical
Goal?
- Gain the patients trust so he/she will tell you
the truth about alternative and complementary
practices used to treat pain and other symptoms
79What does the clinician do with a pt using
complementary therapies?
- Check for drug interactions with prescription or
OTC medications - Assess for harmful side effects
- Discourage over-reliance on traditional healing
if it delays necessary biomedical treatment (for
example, conditions for which an abx is needed)
80Meta-Communicative Cultural Competence
- Pay attention to body language, facial
expressions other behavioral cues much
information may be found in what is not said - Avoid yes/no questions ask open ended questions
or ones that give multiple choices remember that
a nod or yes may mean Yes, I heard rather than
Yes, I understand or Yes, I agree
81Meta-Communicative Cultural Competence
- Consider that smiles laughter may indicate
discomfort or embarassment investigate to
identify what is causing the difficulty or
confusion - Make formal introductoins using titles (Mr.,
Mrs., Ms., Dr.) surnames let the individual
take the lead in getting more familiar
82Meta-Communicative Cultural Competence
- Greet patients with Good Morning or Good
Afternoon and when possible, in their language - If there is a language barrier, assume confusion
watch for tangible signs of understanding, such
as taking out a drivers license or social
security card to get a required number
83Meta-Communicative Cultural Competence
- Take cues from the other person regarding
formality, distance, and touch - Question your assumptions about the other
persons behavior expressions gestures may not
mean what you think consider what a particular
behavior may mean from the other persons point
of view - Explain the reasons for all information you
require or directions you give
84Meta-Communicative Cultural Competence
- Use soft, gentle tone and maintain an even
temperment - Spend time cultivating relationships by getting
to know patients coworkers - Be open to including patients family members in
discussions meetings with patients - Consider the best way to show respect, perhaps by
addressing the head of the family or group first
85Meta-Communicative Cultural Competence
- Use pictures diagrams where appropriate
- Pay attention to subtle cues that may tell you an
individuals dignity has been wounded - Recognize that differences in time consciousness
may be cultural not a sign of laziness or
resistance
86Main Points Cultural Competence
- By being open-minded and respectful toward their
beliefs, values practices, you can help
patients feel more comfortable - Factors that may differ from pt to pt include
ethnic, religious, and occupational factors - Some people belong to more than one ethnic group,
as well as cultural groups and other people have
fewer group identities
87Main Points Cultural Competence
- Importance of religion can vary from person to
person (daily traditions, diet) - Others keep traditions only on special occasions
or not at all - For may different reasons, religious, ethnic,
health, personal preference etc, a person may eat
or avoid certain foods at certain times or not
eat some foods at all
88Main Points Cultural Competence
- Different cultures have different ideas about how
to express and respond to pain - Some cultures value bearing pain silently, while
others expect expressiveness - Different cultures have different views about
when to seek professional medical help, treat
oneself, or be treated by a family member or
traditional healer.
89Thank you for your time!