Abstract

Cultural competence in health care is designed to ensure that health professionals are able to provide quality health care to culturally and ethnically diverse populations. Cultural competence can be effective for improving health professionals’ knowledge, attitudes and skills and patient satisfaction. The impact of cultural competence education and training included in university-based professional training of health professionals is relatively unclear. This study aims to describe the characteristics and assess the methodological quality of published evaluations of cultural competence education and training interventions targeting university based health professionals in training. A systematic search of the cultural competence literature identified 16 published evaluations of cultural competence education and training interventions included in university based professional training of health professionals. Information on the characteristics and methodological quality of included studies was extracted using standardized assessment tools. Nine studies evaluated the integration of cultural competence into health or medical curriculum, four evaluated a cultural immersion experience, and three evaluated cultural awareness education and training. Positive outcomes commonly reported were improvements in students’ knowledge of cultural competence and attitudes towards Indigenous and culturally diverse peoples. The methodological quality of evaluations and the reporting of key methodological criteria were variable. Eleven studies conducted a quantitative and five studies a qualitative evaluation. Strengths of quantitative evaluations included adequate study designs and valid and reliable measurement instruments. Selection bias and poor attrition were the main limitations of quantitative evaluations. Qualitative evaluations were adequate on most methodological criteria but the reporting of ethical and some methodological issues was less than adequate. There is insufficient evidence to provide a strong basis for recommending the inclusion of specific cultural competence education and training strategies in the professional training of university based health professionals. Future evaluations should compare similar types of strategies, and extend their measurement of outcomes beyond those relating to the knowledge, attitudes and skills of health professionals, to those relating to health care outcomes of ethnically diverse peoples.

Highlights

  • Cultural competence is a broad concept used to describe strategies designed to ensure that health professionals are able to provide quality health care to diverse populations [1]

  • In Australia, cultural competency is endorsed by the Australian Medical Council (AMC) and medical courses must provide cultural competency training in their curricula to meet accreditation requirements

  • Eight of the sixteen intervention studies were conducted in Australia [13,17-19,21-24,] and eight in the United States [12,14,15,16,20,25,26,27] Fourteen studies targeted undergraduate and two postgraduate university-based training health professionals

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Summary

Introduction

Cultural competence is a broad concept used to describe strategies designed to ensure that health professionals are able to provide quality health care to diverse populations [1]. According to Betancourt (2006), ‘physicians need a practical set of tools and skills that will enable them to provide quality care to patients everywhere, from anywhere, with whatever differences in background that may exist...’. Consistent with this imprimatur, most medical and nursing schools must provide some level of training in this area to meet accreditation requirements and include some level of cultural competency education and training in their curricula [2,3,4]. These requirements ensure that cultural competency is included in health and medical curricula, there is variation between health and medical schools in the content and delivery of this training [2,5]

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