1 / 56

Culture

Culture. NUR 210 M.Sharpe, RN, MSN, NP. CULTURE. Collection of beliefs, values, behaviors, rituals, habits shared by a group of people and passed from one generation to the next LEARNED FROM BIRTH SHARED BY ALL MEMBERS MOLDED BY ENVIRONMENT SUBCULTURES. Universality Uniqueness Stability.

Download Presentation

Culture

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. Culture NUR 210 M.Sharpe, RN, MSN, NP

  2. CULTURE • Collection of beliefs, values, behaviors, rituals, habits shared by a group of people and passed from one generation to the next • LEARNED FROM BIRTH • SHARED BY ALL MEMBERS • MOLDED BY ENVIRONMENT • SUBCULTURES

  3. Universality Uniqueness Stability Changeability Unconsciousness Variability Common Characteristics

  4. Ethnocentrism • The belief that one’s cultural, ethnic, or professional group is superior to that of others

  5. Stereotyping • Exaggerated beliefs and images that are popularly depicted in the mass media, folklore, and general conversation.

  6. Cultural Blindness • Failure to acknowledge cultural differences

  7. Cultural Shock • Immobilization due to cultural differences

  8. Cultural Diversity • Myth of the “melting pot” is being displaced with a sense of identity among various ethnic groups

  9. Acculturation • The changes of one’s cultural patterns to those of the host society (assumed to take 3 generations in the US)

  10. Racism • Belief that people can be classified on the basis of biophysical traits that indicate innate inferior or superiority • Prejudice: unfavorable attitudes toward an individual or group of people based on unfavorable attitudes toward that group • Discrimination: differential treatment of an individual or a group based on unfavorable attitudes toward the group

  11. Transcultural Assessment Model • Communication • Space • Social organization • Time • Environmental control • Biological variations

  12. AFRICIAN AMERICANS • MORTALITY • Life Expectancy • Strokes • Heart Disease • Infant Mortality • Homicide • HIV/AIDS

  13. Health Problems R/T: • Economic status • poverty • discrimination • social and psychological barriers • Hereditary

  14. Communication • Dialect and language usage • Modes of behavior • French, Spanish, Creole

  15. Space • Close Personal Space

  16. Social Organization • Strong church affiliations within community • Failure to assimilate • choice • segregation • Family System • female headed household • large networks

  17. Time • May be present or future oriented, depends on assimilation into dominant culture.

  18. Environmental Control • Heterogeneous • Religious • prayer and magic • Folk Medicine • Internal remedies • External remedies

  19. Biological Variations • Pallor • Erythema • Cyanosis • Ecchymosis • Juandice • Keloids • Pigmentary disorders • Pseudofolliculitis • Melasma

  20. Biological Variations • Lactose intolerance • Sickle cell anemia • Genetically inherited • Alcoholism • Hypertension • Cancer of esophagus and stomach

  21. HISPANICS • Second largest emerging majority group • Fastest growing population • Mexican • Puerto Rican • Cuban • Other Latin American origin

  22. Communication • Language barrier: 50 dialects • Spanish or Portuguese • Small talk • Verbal expression: elaborate and indirect • Eye contact

  23. Space • Tactile • touch, handshakes, embrace • Physical presence • family

  24. Time • Present • Current activity rather than with planning ahead to be on time

  25. Environmental Control • Health is state of harmony and balance • maintain by diet and keeping four humors in balance • blood • phlegm • black bile • yellow bile

  26. Illness as body imbalance • Illness that are “hot”are treated with a “cold” substance • Hot foods cannot be combined, they are to be eaten with cold foods • Hot and cold do not refer to temperature, but are a description of a particular substance itself. • Have to ask the client, varies from person to person

  27. Curanderismo • A medical system with historic roots that combine Aztec, Spanish, sprititualistic, homeopathic, and scientific elements • Cuandero(a): holistic healer and religious figure

  28. Social Organization • Nuclear families • Large, extended family networks • Strong church affiliations within community • Community social organizations

  29. Dislocation of Parts of Body • Empacho • Caida de la mollera • Mal ojo • Susto

  30. Disease and Health Conditions • Higher rates of obesity and DM • Lower rates of CVD • Communicable diseases • Respiratory: TB • GI: diarrhea, Hep. C • Skin disorders • HIV

  31. Implications • Reduce access to care barriers • Reduce communication barriers • Health promotion messages and health care more effective when delivered within their social frame of reference • Focus on problems seen as problems by the community • Involve the community

  32. ASIAN AMERICANS • Chinese (16%) • Filipinos (13%) • Japanese ((10%) • Asian Indian (9%) • Korean (7%) • Other Asian groups (45%)

  33. Communication • Many languages • Written verses Oral • Communicate RESPECT • Limit use of touch • Avoid eye contact • Nonverbal • Self-control

  34. Asian American Space • Intimate zone confined to private settings • Noncontact people

  35. Social Organization • Respect traditions • Family roles well defined • Role reversal • Religion • Buddhism • Confudianism • Taoism

  36. Time • Emphasis on the past • Time as cycles, events, occurrences

  37. Environmental Control • Cultural health practices • Naturalistic • Supernaturalistic • Metaphysical

  38. Biological Variations • Cancer • stomach, esophagus, liver • DM: diet, lifestyle • CVD: increase with change in diet

  39. NATIVE AMERICANS • 10 different tribes in US • Cherokee and Navajo are largest

  40. Communication • No common language (tribal language) • Touch • Disrespectful to engage in direct eye contact • Use of silence and body language

  41. Space • Difficult adjusting to unfamiliar spaces • Value personal space

  42. Social Organization • Family oriented • Matriarchal society in some tribes • Guided by supernatural

  43. Time • Present oriented • Time is casual, and relative to present tasks that need to be done in a present time frame

  44. Environmental Control • Native American Healers • harmony with the environment • symbolic and sacred items

  45. Biological Variations • DM: major health problem • STD • Suicide • Alcoholism • different enzyme to metabolize alcohol which acts quicker and therefore consume more alcohol

  46. ARAB AMERICANS • Major Religion: Muslim • Major Language: Arabic • Health Care Beliefs • health promotion important • women hold inferior social position • same sex health care providers

  47. Communication • For a women, direct eye contact is limited to other women or family members • Males may touch only those women who are in family • Handshakes are continued for a lengthy period • Educated Saudis respect direct eye contact

  48. Social Organization • Husband is the family leader • Extended families live together • The Saudi mother is revered

  49. Time • Time has little meaning except in business • Social rituals continue while appts. go by attended

  50. Arab Americans Health • DM • Syphilis • Leprosy • Cholera • Rickets and malnutrition • AIDS

More Related