html5-img
1 / 40

Cultural Competency in Health

Cultural Competency in Health . About cultural competency. What is it? Why do we need it? What does it do? Who is responsible?. What is cultural competency?.

liko
Download Presentation

Cultural Competency in Health

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cultural Competency in Health

  2. About cultural competency What is it? Why do we need it? What does it do? Who is responsible?

  3. What is cultural competency? “ Behaviours, attitudes and policies that enable systems, organisations, professions and individuals to work effectively in cross-cultural situations ”

  4. What is cultural competency? • improves health and wellbeing by integrating culture into delivery of health services • focuses on capacity of health systems • more than awareness of difference • everyone’s responsibility - not “special interest” groups • it’s not new !!…good health policy & services meet consumers’ needs

  5. Why do we need cultural competency in health? • Everyone has a right to health care that meets their needs • Australia’s diversity is increasing • Health system not always responsive • Health inequalities experienced by many groups • Health services, managers and practitioners are accountable for meeting needs of all consumers • World-wide pressure to improve • Bangkok Charter 2005, WHO World Health Report 2006

  6. Benefits • Improves equity & access for all groups • Good business practice • More effective service for health consumers and carers • Better use of health resources

  7. A culturally competent health system • Acknowledges benefits of diversity • Achieves best, most appropriate care for each consumer • Ensures self-determination for consumers and communities • Holds governments, health organisations and managers accountable for meeting needs of the communities they serve

  8. Who’s responsible? Governments – all levels Policy decision-makers– all agencies / all levels of government (not just health!) Managers– CEOs, finance, operational managers of health & related services Professions – professional bodies and their members Workers& practitioners– in health & related organisations Individuals – Everyone can learn and contribute

  9. A guide to improving cultural competency New NHMRC guide Aim Target audience

  10. —NHMRC Guide — Cultural competency in health: a guide for policy, partnerships and participation • Nationalfocus • Complements existing work • Generic approach • Applies to wide range of groups – not specialised • Provides model – 4 domains for action • systemic, organisational, professional & individual • Focus on healthier living & environments, obesity & overweight • Recognises gaps, identifies next steps • Based on research, consultation & feedback • Prepared by experts /researchers in public health

  11. Aim of Guide • Support development of health care services that meet needs of culturally & linguistically diverse communities Target audience • High level policy & decision-makers • Impact on-the-ground health services • Anyone interested in health & related policy

  12. Outcomes • Stimulate broader discussion • Ownership of issues • Begin nationally supported, sustained change • Provide ideas for next steps

  13. Increasing cultural competency Principles Four Dimensional Model Developing Competency

  14. Systems, organisations, professions can Adopt principles – that underpin cultural competency in health Take action – on infrastructure & human resources that support cultural competency Set standards – establish specific competencies at system, organisation, professional and individual level

  15. Principles for cultural competency Engaging consumers & communities and sustaining reciprocal relationships Leadership and accountability for sustained change Building on strengths — know the community, know what works A shared responsibility — creating partnerships and sustainability

  16. Principle 1 Engaging consumers & communities and sustaining reciprocal relationships • Promotion of healthier living and environments is a reciprocal relationship • CALD background communities and health services engage, learn & exchange at all stages of health care research, development and delivery

  17. Principle 2 Leadership and accountability for sustained change • Begins at highest levels of systems, organisations and professions • Continues to individual development and practice

  18. Principle 3 Building on strengths — know the community, know what works • Population health approach • Use data, information on diverse communities • Acknowledge CALD experience – successful practice • Understand risk factors & protective behaviours

  19. Principle 4 A shared responsibility — creating partnerships and sustainability • Partnerships – between health and human services, education and research sectors • Find systematic and long-term approaches

  20. systemic organisational professional individual The Model Four dimensions for action … Source: Research and consultation report commissioned for NHMRC project

  21. systemic organisational professional individual Action at Systemic Level • Fosters culturally competent behaviour through: • Effective policies and procedures • Mechanisms for monitoring • Sufficient resources • Policies that support involvement of culturally diverse communities in health matters

  22. systemic organisational professional individual Action at Organisational Level • Cultural competency is valued, integral to core business, supported and evaluated • Skills and resources to support diverse clients are in place • Management committed to diversity management • e.g. training for staff, cultural and linguistic diversity in staffing

  23. systemic organisational professional individual Action at Professional Level • Makes cultural competency important part of education & professional development • Professions develop cultural competence standards • Guidance provided for working lives of individuals

  24. systemic organisational professional individual Action at Individual Level • Individuals develop optimum knowledge, attitudes, behaviours re cultural competence • Individual health professionals are supported to work with diverse communities • Individuals develop relevant, appropriate, sustainable health promotion programs

  25. Develop competencies • Competency = knowledge, conviction, capacity for action • Systems, organisations, professional groups & individuals can develop cultural competencies in specific areas…

  26. Specific competencies… • Policy / Evaluation • e.g. a policy framework that directs & supports cultural competency across health system • Budgeting & resources • e.g. high priority areas are specifically budgeted for – staff training, interpreter & language skills • Consumer participation • e.g. reps of diverse communities are included at all stages of service development & delivery

  27. Specific competencies… • Management • e.g. performance agreements hold managers accountable • Education/skills • e.g. professions consider cultural / linguistic diversity in communication & health practice • Self-reflection • e.g. individuals understand potential impact of cultural & linguistic diversity on clients, & adapt practice to meet cross-cultural requirements

  28. Competence = knowledge conviction capacity for action Organisation & profession support individual system organisation profession individual Individual applies knowledge, conviction, capacity for action to inform organisation, profession & system

  29. Practical approaches Case study scenarios Next steps Resources, contacts & more info

  30. Case Study Scenario 1: Media campaign Research shows poor nutrition and low fitness affect some CALD background groups more than others • How would cultural competency principles guide a media campaign to promote healthy eating and improve fitness?

  31. Culturally competent approaches … • Use research • identify issues & key groups • Partnerships • work with relevant community leaders, share knowledge • Community engagement • get communities involved – from planning onward • use consumer advisory group, focus groups • Methodology • select media outlets used by the CALD background group/s you want to reach • Evaluate • before & after data to assess impact

  32. Case Study 2: Community group fitness A Muslim community leader notices low physical activity / reduced fitness among Muslim women in her local area • What culturally competent strategies would help find a solution?

  33. Culturally competent strategies …. • Community involvement • Muslim women initiate action, identify solutions • Reciprocity • Culturally appropriate community consultation, informal discussion, discuss barriers within community & with local authorities • Sustainability • Identify culturally appropriate solutions that have ongoing support, e.g. women-only exercise classes, appropriate venues • Think about wider factors e.g. child care, transport etc. • Share success • Evaluate & document outcomes, share learning with other cultural groups

  34. Next Steps Suggestions for projects & action at all levels • Individual • Organisational • Professional • Systemic

  35. Next steps for individuals • Access toolkits or other material to develop self-awareness & competencies • Take part in cross-disciplinary forums to share information & skills, promote support & awareness • Look for opportunities to introduce or improve cultural competence – discuss with colleagues

  36. Next steps for organisations • Participate in partnership forums with govts to apply the Model locally • Budget strategies – mobilise resources, prioritise cultural competence • Management competencies and performance measures • HR strategies • recruitment, succession planning, education • Context-specific competencies for your organisation, its community & health workers

  37. Next steps: professional groups • Demonstrate leadership • raise profile of cultural competency, recommend strategies for professional practice • Participate in partnership forums with govts / other agencies on applying the model • Reflect principles of cultural competency in ethical & other professional conduct codes • Develop policies and context-specific competencies for specific health professional group • Promote information to members

  38. Next steps across systems • A specific resource for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples • National collaboration on framework for culturally competent health practice • Address gaps in research, information and evidence base • Promote best practice diversity organisations

  39. How to find out more • Institute for Health and Diversity www.vu.edu.au/diversity • Cultural Competency for Healthy Living: a guide for policy, partnerships and participation - www.nhmrc.gov.au • Multicultural Mental Health Australia www.mmha.org.au • Centre for Culture, Ethnicity and Health www.ceh.org.au

  40. Cultural Competency in Health Care…. Who’s responsible? Everybody

More Related