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Health Occupations

Health Occupations. Cultural Diversity. Individual factors causing uniqueness. Physical characteristics: Gender Body size Hair, nail, skin color Family life Socioeconomic status Religious beliefs Geographical location Education & occupation Life experiences Cultural/ethnic heritage.

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Health Occupations

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  1. Health Occupations Cultural Diversity

  2. Individual factors causing uniqueness • Physical characteristics: • Gender • Body size • Hair, nail, skin color • Family life • Socioeconomic status • Religious beliefs • Geographical location • Education & occupation • Life experiences • Cultural/ethnic heritage

  3. Culture • Definition – values, beliefs, attitudes, languages, symbols, rituals, behaviors, & customs unique to a particular group of people & is passed down from one generation to the next • Set of rules • Blueprint for living • Family relation, child rearing, education, occupational choice, social interactions, spirituality, religious beliefs, food preferences, health beliefs, & health care

  4. Culture • Not uniform through-out group but does provide foundation for behavior • 4 basic characteristics • Culture is learned • Culture is shared • Culture is social in nature • Culture is dynamic & changing

  5. Ethnicity • Classification of people based on national origin &/or culture • Share common heritage, national origin, social customs, language, & beliefs • May not practice all cultural beliefs but is still influenced by members of group • Common ethnic groups in U.S. • African American, Asian American, European American, Hispanic American, Middle Eastern/Arabic American, Native American • Subgroups within each ethnic group

  6. Race • Classification of people based on physical or biological characteristics • Color of skin, hair, & eyes • Facial features • Blood type • Bone structure • Frequently used to LABEL people & explain patterns of behavior • Race cuts across multiple ethnic/cultural groups, it is the values from the groups than account for behaviors (White & black Africans, Hispanics, & Asians)

  7. Cultural Diversity • Differences among people resulting from cultural, ethnic, & racial factors • Influence behavior, self-perception, judgment of others, & interpersonal relationships • “Melting pot” – absorption of other cultures into the dominant culture – ASSIMILATION • “Salad bowl” – cultural differences are appreciated & respected, multicultural society

  8. Cultural diversity • Acculturation • Process of learning the beliefs & behaviors of a dominant culture & assuming some of the characteristics • Occurs slowly over time, usually years • Recent immigrants are more likely to follow the language & customs of the country from which they immigrated • Second & third generation Americans are more likely to use English & follow American behavior patterns • HCP must be aware of cultural diversity & know that no person is 100% anything • Sensitivity – ability to recognize & appreciate the personal characteristics of others is important (ex. Calling patients by their first name may be seen as disrespectful)

  9. Bias interferes with cultural diversity • A preference inhibiting impartial judgment • Ethnocentricity – believing that your ethnic group is superior to others • May antagonize others from different cultures • Common biases • Young people physically/mentally superior • College educated people superior • Rich people superior to poor people • Obese & short people inferior • Nurses inferior to doctors • Women inferior to men • Sexual preference can also have bias

  10. Prejudice interferes • Strong feeling or belief about a person or subject formed without reviewing facts or information, “pre-judge” • Prejudiced people regard their ideas as right & other ideas as wrong • Afraid of things that are different • Causes fear & distrust, interfering with interpersonal relationships • All people prejudiced to some degree • Want to feel that our beliefs are correct • Obtain as much info as possible to decrease prejudice

  11. Stereotyping interferes • Assumption that everyone in a particular group is the same • Ignores individual characteristics & labels an individual • “All blondes are dumb” • “All jocks are stupid” • Exists regarding race, gender, body size, occupation, & ethnic/cultural groups

  12. Avoiding bias, prejudice, & stereotyping • These are barriers to effective relationships • Ways to avoid • Know & be aware of own beliefs & values • Learn about other groups • Be sensitive to behaviors/practices different than yours • Respect others’ beliefs, don’t have to practice them • Develop friendships with wide variety of people • Ask & encourage questions • Evaluate all info before forming opinion • Be open about differences, avoid jokes • If mistakes happen, apologize or forgive

  13. Areas of cultural diversity • Goal is to provide holistic care – wellbeing of the entire person, physical, social, emotional, & mental needs • Family organization – structure of family & who is dominant • Nuclear family – mom, dad, children • Extended family important • European Americans • Extended family – nuclear + grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins • Many generations share same household • Asian, Hispanic, & Native Americans

  14. Areas of cultural diversity • Family organization (cont) • Affects care of children, sick, & elderly • Nuclear families – people outside of family care for children, sick, elderly • Extended families – families take care of children, sick, elderly within the home • Patriarchal – father or oldest male in charge • Matriarchal – mother or oldest female in charge • Many families have both mother & father sharing responsibility

  15. Areas of cultural diversity • Family organization (cont) • Pts with extended families may have many visitors with everyone concerned & with an opinion • Family members may provide personal cares • Allow family to assist as much as possible • Ask questions to determine which type of family the pt has & what they are comfortable with

  16. Areas of cultural diversity • Language • Dominant language – English • Many other languages are spoken (20% of population under age 65) • Variations within a language • Translators helpful • Points to follow with non-English speakers • Speak slowly • Use simple words & nonverbal communication • Use gestures or pictures • Don’t speak louder than normal • Learn words or phrases in pt’s language • Legal requirements – informed consent

  17. Areas of cultural diversity • Personal space & touch • Territorial space – distance people require to feel comfortable while interacting with others • Close-contact cultures • Comfortable standing close to & touching • Arabs, French, Latin Americans, Hispanic Americans • Within cultural groups, variations • Women stand closer than men • Children stand closer than adults • Distant-contact cultures • Prefer space (2-6 ft) during interactions • African & European Americans like space, but will shake hands

  18. Areas of cultural diversity • Personal space & touch (cont) • Asian Americans stand closer but usually don’t touch, no PDA • Cambodia – opposite sexes may never touch in public, only parents can touch head of child • Vietnamese – only elders can touch children’s heads (head is sacred) • Middle Eastern countries – men may not touch unrelated females, men can shake hands only with men

  19. Areas of cultural diversity • Personal space & touch (cont) • HCP have to use touch & invade personal space to give care • Use slow & relaxed approach, give pt time • Be alert to verbal & nonverbal • Give pt breathing room, move in & out • Determine preferences by asking questions

  20. Areas of cultural diversity • Eye contact • European Americans – interest & trustworthiness • Asian Americans my consider it rude • Native Americans use peripheral vision, may regard as hostile or threatening • Hispanic & African Americans may use brief eye contact but then look away to indicate respect & attentiveness • Muslim women – avoid as sign of modesty • India – people of different socioeconomic classes avoid eye contact with each other

  21. Areas of cultural diversity • Eye contact (cont) • Different beliefs can lead to misunderstandings • Be alert to comfort levels • Lack of eye contact may be respect instead of not listening

  22. Areas of cultural diversity • Gestures • U.S. gestures for yes & no are actually opposite in India • Pointing at someone is common in U.S. but a threat among some Native Americans & Asians • O.K. sign is insulting to some Asian cultures • Be aware that gestures may be misinterpreted & avoid if pts are uncomfortable with them

  23. Areas of cultural diversity • Health Care Beliefs • Biomedical health care system • Most common health care system in U.S. • Western system • Cause of disease = microorganisms, diseased cells, & aging • Licensed practitioners • Beliefs • Encourage pts to learn about illness • Inform pts about terminal disease • Teach self-care • Uses medications & techniques to cure • Teaches preventive care

  24. Areas of cultural diversity • Alternative health care methods • Can be used in addition to or as replacement for biomedical health care • Chiropractors, homeopaths, naturopaths, hypnotists • Types of treatments • Nutritional methods – organic foods, herbs, vitamins, antioxidants • Mind & body control methods- relaxation, meditation, biofeedback, hypnotherapy, imagery • Energetic touch therapy – massage, acupuncture, accupressure, therapeutic touch • Body-movement methods – yoga, tai chi, chiropractors • Spiritual methods – faith healing, prayer, spiritual counseling

  25. Areas of cultural diversity • Spirituality • Beliefs individuals have about themselves, their connections with others, & relationships with a higher power • Need to find meaning & purpose in life • With strong foundation, has basis for understanding life, finding support, & drawing on resources to deal with problems • Can be expressed through religious practices but are two different things • Evolves & changes throughout life

  26. Areas of cultural diversity • Religion • Organized system of belief in a superhuman power or higher power • Associated with a particular church • Beliefs about birth, life, illness, & death have religious origins • Can affect dietary practices • Pts may not follow all customs & beliefs of their religion • Atheist – person who does not believe in any deity • Agnostic – person who believes that the existence of God cannot be proved or disproved

  27. Areas of cultural diversity • Religion (cont) • Show respect by • Be a willing listener • Provide support for religious practices • Respect symbols & books • Allow privacy during clergy visits or while pt is observing religious customs like communion, prayer, & meditation • Refrain from imposing your own beliefs on the pt

  28. Respecting cultural diversity • Regard each person as unique individual • Recognize that every person adopts beliefs & forms patterns of behaviors based on culture, ethnicity, life experiences, spirituality, & religion • Be aware of pts needs to provide total care (holistic)

  29. Respecting cultural diversity • Learn to appreciate & respect the personal characteristics of others • Listen to pts express their beliefs • Learn to appreciate differences • Learn more about different groups • Recognize & avoid bias, prejudice, & stereotyping • Ask questions to determine pts’ beliefs • Allow pts to practice beliefs if possible • Be sensitive to pts reactions to eye contact, touch, invasion of personal space • Respect spirituality, religion, symbols, & rituals

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