Health Disparities and Culturally Competent Care Key Points Determinants of Health
Health Disparities and Culturally Competent Care Key Points Determinants of Health
Health Disparities and Culturally Competent Care Key Points Determinants of Health
KEY POINTS
DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH
Determinants of health are those factors that influence the health of individuals
and help to explain the difference in health among persons. They can either improve a
persons
They can either improve a persons health status or put an individual at risk for
disease, injury, and mental illness.
Determinants of health include education, health behaviors, social and physical
environment, socioeconomic status, genetics, and access to health care.
Health status describes the health of a person or community. Community health
status measures include birth and death rates, life expectancy, and morbidity and
mortality rates.
CULTURE
Culture encompasses the knowledge, values, beliefs, art, morals, law, customs,
and habits of the members of a society, including the systems of technology, education,
social structures, and political practices. Culture is a way of life for a group of people.
Values are the sets of rules by which individuals, families, groups, and
communities live. They are the principles and standards that serve as the basis for beliefs,
attitudes, and behaviors.
Each person is culturally unique, resulting from different perspectives and
interpretations of situations. These differences may be based on age, gender, marital
status, family structure, income, education level, religious views, and life experiences.
Cultural practices change over time through processes such as acculturation,
assimilation, and biculturalism. The practices of ethnocentrism, stereotyping, and cultural
imposition can negatively affect patient care.
Ethnocentrism refers to the belief that ones own culture and worldview are
superior to those of others from different cultural, ethnic, or racial backgrounds
Acculturation is the lifelong process of incorporating cultural aspects of the
contexts in which a person grows, lives, works, and ages.
Stereotyping refers to an overgeneralized viewpoint that members of a specific
culture, race, or ethnic group are alike and share the same values and beliefs.
CULTURAL COMPETENCE
Cultural competence is a multiple-step process that involves the integration of
knowledge, attitudes, and skills to enhance a working relationship with an individual who
is from a different culture.
Cultural competence is the ability to understand and work effectively with
patients, colleagues, and others whose beliefs, values, and histories differ from yours.