Results 251 to 260 of about 47,920 (299)
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Cultural competence in hospice
American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine®, 2004Research shows that ethnic minorities access hospice care significantly less often than Caucasians. In part, this has been attributed to the lack of cultural competence among hospice staff. To assess cultural competence among hospice workers, this article evaluates the results of a descriptive, exploratory survey that was submitted to 125 ...
Ardith Z, Doorenbos +1 more
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Seminars in Oncology Nursing, 2001
To define key concepts and summarize available guidelines that are important resources to assist nurses to provide culturally competent care.Medline, anthropologic and epidemiologic literature, and National Institutes of Health documents.Controversy remains about the most appropriate language to use to describe features of diverse populations.Becoming ...
M Z, Cohen, G, Palos
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To define key concepts and summarize available guidelines that are important resources to assist nurses to provide culturally competent care.Medline, anthropologic and epidemiologic literature, and National Institutes of Health documents.Controversy remains about the most appropriate language to use to describe features of diverse populations.Becoming ...
M Z, Cohen, G, Palos
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Cultural Competence and the Culture of Medicine
New England Journal of Medicine, 2005The phrase “cultural competence” arises often in discussions about improving medical education and health care in the United States. Renee Fox writes that most considerations of cultural competence neither identify nor explore the culture of medical training grounds.
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Cultural Competency in the Trenches
Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved, 2013core mission of health professions schools is to educate and train a workforce that will be optimally prepared to provide health care and public health services for the diverse communities that they serve. It is important to create and develop a health care workforce who can understand and assist in the battle against health care disparities.
Michael L, Rowland +3 more
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CULTURAL COMPETENCE: WHAT IS IT?
Issues in Mental Health Nursing, 2007Over the last 15 years cultural competence in practice and research has become accepted as the standard when working with diverse ethnic and racial populations.
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AJN, American Journal of Nursing, 2010
One hospital's efforts to create a culturally sensitive health care community.
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One hospital's efforts to create a culturally sensitive health care community.
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Journal of Transcultural Nursing, 2014
In nursing education, most of the current teaching practices perpetuate an essentialist perspective of culture and make it imperative to refresh the concept of cultural competence in nursing. The purpose of this article is to propose a constructivist definition of cultural competence that stems from the conclusions of an extensive critical review of ...
Amélie, Blanchet Garneau +1 more
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In nursing education, most of the current teaching practices perpetuate an essentialist perspective of culture and make it imperative to refresh the concept of cultural competence in nursing. The purpose of this article is to propose a constructivist definition of cultural competence that stems from the conclusions of an extensive critical review of ...
Amélie, Blanchet Garneau +1 more
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Competence and Culture in the Police
Sociology, 1988Assessments of the achievement of competence in organisations often obscure the relationship between external or formal criteria of competence and those of members. Efforts to reform police practice may founder on the lack of fit between the terms in which outsiders and members construe `competent' practice.
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Virtual Reality for Cultural Competences
Proceedings of the 17th International Conference on Mobile and Ubiquitous Multimedia, 2018With the expansion of multicultural communities, raising awareness to diminish cultural misconceptions became a must. We investigate different research probes using interactive Virtual Reality (VR) applications to increase such awareness. VR environments provide a high sense of immersion, which enhance the user's experience.
Sarah Faltaous +4 more
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Journal of Healthcare Management, 2013
In 1900, 88% of the U.S. population was composed of white people. Minorities, including African Americans and Hispanics, lived in certain parts of the country but were barely found in others. We had, in other words, a fairly homogeneous nation. More than 100 years later, the demographic landscape of the nation is dramatically different.
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In 1900, 88% of the U.S. population was composed of white people. Minorities, including African Americans and Hispanics, lived in certain parts of the country but were barely found in others. We had, in other words, a fairly homogeneous nation. More than 100 years later, the demographic landscape of the nation is dramatically different.
openaire +2 more sources

