Abstract

BackgroundCross-cultural educational initiatives for professionals are now commonplace across a variety of sectors including health care. A growing number of studies have attempted to explore the utility of such initiatives on workplace behaviors and client outcomes. Yet few studies have explored how professionals perceive cross-cultural educational models (e.g., cultural awareness, cultural competence) and the extent to which they (and their organizations) execute the principles in practice. In response, this study aimed to explore the general perspectives of health care professionals on culturally competent care, their experiences working with multi-cultural patients, their own levels of cultural competence and the extent to which they believe their workplaces address cross-cultural challenges.MethodsThe perspectives and experiences of a sample of 56 health care professionals across several health care systems from a Mid-Western state in the United States were sourced via a 19-item questionnaire. The questionnaire comprised both open-ended questions and multiple choice items. Percentages across participant responses were calculated for multiple choice items. A thematic analysis of open-ended responses was undertaken to identify dominant themes.ResultsParticipants largely expressed confidence in their ability to meet the needs of multi-cultural clientele despite almost half the sample not having undergone formal cross-cultural training. The majority of the sample appeared to view cross-cultural education from a ‘cultural awareness’ perspective - effective cross-cultural care was often defined in terms of possessing useful cultural knowledge (e.g., norms and customs) and facilitating communication (the use of interpreters); in other words, from an immediate practical standpoint. The principles of systemic cross-cultural approaches (e.g., cultural competence, cultural safety) such as a recognition of racism, power imbalances, entrenched majority culture biases and the need for self-reflexivity (awareness of one’s own prejudices) were scarcely acknowledged by study participants.ConclusionsFindings indicate a need for interventions that acknowledge the value of cultural awareness-based approaches, while also exploring the utility of more comprehensive cultural competence and safety approaches.

Highlights

  • IntroductionCross-cultural educational initiatives for professionals are commonplace across a variety of sectors including health care

  • This study aims to gather and explore i) the general perspectives of health care professionals on culturally competent care, ii) their experiences working with multi-cultural patients, iii) their perceptions of their own levels of cultural competence and iv) the extent to which they believe their respective organizations address cross-cultural challenges in the workplace

  • Cross-cultural educational initiatives for professionals are commonplace across a variety of sectors including health care

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Summary

Introduction

Cross-cultural educational initiatives for professionals are commonplace across a variety of sectors including health care. Participating health care systems usually employ one, or a combination, of several popular cross-cultural models that have emerged over the past four decades These include, but are not limited to, cultural awareness, cultural competence, cultural safety, cultural humility and cultural intelligence. Cultural competence (though often used generically) is an institutional framework that expands an organization’s internal and external capacity to support and implement protocols that improve worker attitudes, cross-cultural communication, staff diversity, and ongoing relationships with multi-cultural communities and stakeholders [14] The adoption of these models, or aspects of the models, are believed to reduce the obstacles that still contribute to the poor health care experiences and unmet health needs of particular cultural minority groups [15]

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