Summary
Nurse must have knowledge about on different cultural factors such as language, beliefs, and values. Having an education on all of these will allow competent care. Nurse that don 't understand those factors are challenged while providing care and it also leads to other barriers. However, if they can communicate to the patient well they can advocate for the best possible outcome of the patient 's health. If conflict arises in the patient 's health choices the nurse will be courageous by continuing to advocate for what is ethical and best the the patients. Overall, nurses need to be culturally aware, educated, and able to apply knowledge situationally depending on patient’s beliefs, values, and
In nursing school, students were introduced to the idea of cultural competence. It is a concept that I am familiar with due to my cultural background. Being respectful and aware of the beliefs and values of other traditions cannot be neglected and ignored. We are all global citizens that hold different views and perspectives, therefore leaders must equip themselves with the understanding that people expect and will act differently based on their cultural beliefs.
In other words, to be culturally competent, professionals must provide superior, respectful medical care to all patients. This must start with building an understanding of basic philosophies and value systems of different population groups. This is especially critical in the nursing field where much time is spent providing hands on care with each patient. A nurse must be sensitive to language differences, social cues and personal lifestyle choices
For example, a nurse once told me that they had never had any exposure to people that did not look like them, talk like them, or think like them. I was not judgmental, but I was amazed that this is possible at this day and time. I felt like this person was missing out on so many cultural differences. I want nurses to have cultural awareness and cultural sensitivity and to have some knowledge and understanding that there are many different cultures that their patients bring to the health environment. Culturally competent nursing care helps ensure patients’ satisfaction and positive patient outcomes.
Nurses working in the healthcare industry meet patients from many different backgrounds and cultures. It is important for a nurse to know beliefs of different cultures in order to provide culturally competent care to patients. The purpose of this paper is to teach about the health practices and beliefs of
In order to provide adequate care for patients of diverse populations, it is essential for nurses to understand different cultures. This will help nurses to better communicate and interact with patients. In order to achieve culturally competent care, the patients’ values, beliefs, and perspective must be considered. It is important for nurses to be aware of their own cultural values and biases that may exist towards cultural groups that are different from their own. As a result, it is essential for patients to be granted the opportunity to explore various options when given care.
If nurses lack of understanding regarding community demographics and cultural differences, they can have unintentional bias, and stereotype patients due to a lack of awareness of the cultural demographics of the community they serve (Camphinha-Bacote, 2011). Cultural competence is the understanding of different cultures and how that impacts the provision of patient care. Cultural competence in nursing is defined as one willingness or the desire to understand a patient’s culture, the ability to learn about a defined cultures belief system, and to work effectively as a healthcare provider understanding the dynamics of the patient’s culture as it relates to their relationships and care (Kardong-Edgren et Al.,
When we are directly at the table, we can be a voice and provide guidance and leadership in all areas and to all involved with those areas. We as medical professionals need to remember that the true objective to building the social aptitude, nurse professionals should be informed on how to present medical and health information, treatments, and basically any healthcare material in a socially competent way. But different sorts of classes have been created the country over, and these actions have not really been organized or incorporated into our healthcare planning for success. As the medicinal professionals, we need to implement educational classes and material that are effective in both decreasing diversity and enhancing cultural healthcare competencies. Healthcare equality for each and every individual no matter culture, race, educational status, etc.
A cultural competency decrease the cultural sensitive issue and elevates the therapeutic nurse-client relationship. The possible challenge for a nurse while providing cultural sensitive care could be unable to acquire in-depth culture knowledge, lack of experience and fear. To address these challenges, a nurse should obtain obtain broad knowledge of how culture can
I think it takes work for everyone to be able to be great in an intercultural setting. It will even take more work for me due to the fact that I do not have a very extensively diverse background. I will have to have an openness to understanding different experiences and traditions that patients might haveto be able to provide great and competent care. As a nurse I will be sure to be aware of barriers that can be set in place in an intercultural setting. I will be aware of nonverbal behaviors, language, bias and differing perception (Arnold and Boggs 2016).
Ethical Issues in Nursing: Nurse-Patient Ratios Megan Harvey, Katie McKelvery, Erica Robbins & Cassandra Tingley St. Johns River State College March 2018 Ethical Issues in Nursing: Nurse-Patient Ratios Every day nurses are faced with ethical dilemmas. Challenges in these situations are becoming more and more complex due to increasing workload and sicker patients. When a nursing unit is understaffed not only are nurses more likely to become burnt out, but their patients are far less likely to receive the quality of care they deserve. The problem is that the Federal regulations require hospitals who participate in Medicare to “have ‘adequate’ numbers of licensed nurses (RN, LPN, CNA) to provide care to all patients as needed,” but the regulations
Military Nurse’s Dilemma Chi Tiet University of Michigan - Flint Nurses are a group of professionals who faces a variety of ethical dilemmas while working. Therefore, these dilemmas cannot only impact on their personalities but also affect their patients. However, ethical dilemmas are argumentative and difficult to deal with, so there is no “right” or “wrong” answer for them. In a military nurse’s dilemma, a military RN is ordered to force feeding a terrorist prisoner while he is undergoing interrogation, and the prisoner is on a hunger strike protesting. The nurse is torn, but fearing of reprisal if orders are disobeyed, so the nurse is appalled at the over-riding a patient’s wish by force feeding him agains his wish.
Nursing is a responsibility to provide the finest care regardless of the patient’s age, race, religion, sex, disability, ethnicity, sexual orientation, or their past. Nurses must keep up to date on education, new processes, policies and keep informed about new laws and regulations in healthcare, so outstanding healthcare can be administered. As a nurse, you have undertaken a responsibility to provide people the finest quality care that can possibly receive. It is a nurses’ duty to follow the code of ethics, to act
Describe the duties of the professional nurse in this case with Mr. Cole As a nurse we are supposed to have compassion and build a rapport with our patients but we must uphold our ethical principles when it comes to this dilemma. As for analyzing this situation and coming to a decision I would use the nursing process since it provides a helpful mechanism for finding solutions to ethical dilemmas. (Whitehead 2007). I would assess the situation and ask myself about the medical facts, psychosocial facts as well as cultural beliefs, patients’ wishes and what values are in conflict. I would then move on to planning and make sure that everyone is involved during this stage and continue on down the line with the nursing process.
Culturally competent nurses advocates for patients regardless of cultural differences. Hollinger-Smith (n.d) “A health care professional who has learned cultural competence engages in assistive, supportive, facilitative, or enabling acts that are tailor-made to fit with individual, group, or institutional cultural values, beliefs, and lifeways in order to provide quality health care” (p. 2). Nurses look to profit from a better health care system and practice mutual respect, formality, thoughtfulness and overall good
Providing care to a patient is a particularly challenging process that requires a great deal of effort from a nurse. A nurse’s ability to give quality care to their patient is an important aspect to a patient’s life both now and in the future. As such, nurses must exhibit specific qualities in their practice in order to maintain the best standard of care for their patients. Given this, I believe that the standards of knowledge, advocacy, and self-awareness are foundational to the nursing practice and to a nurse’s capacity to provide quality patient care. Knowledge