Abstract

This commentary describes how the first program for enhancing cultural competence in an Israeli healthcare facility was implemented at the ALYN Hospital Pediatric and Adolescent Rehabilitation Center in Jerusalem, and the lessons that can be learned from the ALYN experience for other healthcare facilities attempting to enhance their cultural competence, particularly in environments of heightened inter-cultural tension. A structured program was developed to educate hospital staff and optimize the hospital’s administrative functioning towards the goal of enhanced cultural competence. The program was initiated with an international conference on site to promote awareness of the concept, and included, among other steps, the appointment of a senior administration “Coordinator of Cultural Competence”, improvements in translation services, regular educational seminars, the opening of a Muslim prayer room in the hospital, and accommodations for Sabbath and Ramadan observance. Enhancing cultural competence was found to be an ongoing work-in-progress, with unanticipated cultural challenges constantly emerging, and demanding ad-hoc solutions. Some elements of the program encountered resistance from members of staff, and occasionally from members of the hospital’s dominant patient cultures. Overall, enhanced cultural competence at ALYN brought benefit to both patients and the institution, ranging from a more pleasant patient experience to improved patient adherence to treatment plans, better patient-caregiver communication and a more positive and cohesive professional team and work environment.

Highlights

  • This commentary describes how the first program for enhancing cultural competence in an Israeli healthcare facility was implemented at the ALYN Hospital Pediatric and Adolescent Rehabilitation Center in Jerusalem, and the lessons that can be learned from the ALYN experience for other healthcare facilities attempting to enhance their cultural competence, in environments of heightened inter-cultural tension

  • Motivated by a desire to improve the patient experience in our hospital and to enhance patient adherance with treatment plans, ALYN adopted “improved cultural competence” as an institutional priority in 2007

  • ALYN first learned about the concept from the Jerusalem Intercultural Center, which accompanied the hospital in devising a program of structured steps and goals designed to educate the hospital’s staff about cultural competence and to revamp the hospital’s administrative structure and functioning in this area

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Summary

Introduction

This commentary describes how the first program for enhancing cultural competence in an Israeli healthcare facility was implemented at the ALYN Hospital Pediatric and Adolescent Rehabilitation Center in Jerusalem, and the lessons that can be learned from the ALYN experience for other healthcare facilities attempting to enhance their cultural competence, in environments of heightened inter-cultural tension. The first hospital in Israel to adopt enhanced cultural competence as an institutional goal was the ALYN Hospital Pediatric and Adolescent Rehabilitation Center (ALYN) in Jerusalem. Motivated by a desire to improve the patient experience in our hospital and to enhance patient adherance with treatment plans, ALYN adopted “improved cultural competence” as an institutional priority in 2007.

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