Definitely, language barrier between the healthcare staff and the patient can hinder the appropriate delivery of care. What happen if you do not have a nursing staff that has the same background of the patient? As a culturally competent nurse, you know that there are other avenues to resolve that, like using a hospital interpreter or using a phone line for linguistic help. Spector (2013) stated that the Joint Commission of Hospital Accreditation and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services obligate that all health care providers be “culturally competent.” According to her, cultural competency entails that the health care provider understands and attends to the totality of the patient’s situation and it will need the combination of knowledge, attitudes, and skills. In addition to that, she acknowledges that provider should be culturally appropriate in the sense of applying the background knowledge acquired and be able to provide the best possible …show more content…
And also not to exclude the importance of cultural sensitivity wherein the health care provider has some basic knowledge of the custom, and tradition observe among the diverse cultural groups being served in the health care setting. You stated that due to the increasing cost of education, nurses coming from higher …show more content…
Agree that health promotion can vary based upon the diversity of the patient due to their prior behavior, but there are no two people alike and each should be treated as individual with different needs. The California Health Advocates (2007) indicated that is not possible to predict the beliefs and behaviors of individuals based on their race, ethnicity, or national