Results 251 to 260 of about 182,271 (309)
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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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Oncology Nursing Forum, 2003
Today's healthcare environment is increasingly complex and provides significant challenges to nurses and patients alike. It is imperative that nurses strive to understand the diversity of their patients and coworkers to provide optimum care. One essential component of nursing practice is the ability to provide Culturally Competent Care (CCC).
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Today's healthcare environment is increasingly complex and provides significant challenges to nurses and patients alike. It is imperative that nurses strive to understand the diversity of their patients and coworkers to provide optimum care. One essential component of nursing practice is the ability to provide Culturally Competent Care (CCC).
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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.
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Long-Term Care and Cultural Competence
The Consultant Pharmacist, 2017The United States has historically been a melting pot of cultures. Today the population has changed because many immigrants are now older than past immigrants, are frequently retired, and have chronic diseases that need careful management. Health care providers need to be culturally competent to deliver effective health care to these diverse ...
Jeannette Y, Wick, Myroslava, Sharabun
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Culturally Competent Care: Visibleand Invisible
Journal of Transcultural Nursing, 1994This is a new section of the Journal of Transcultural Nursing to capture contemporary perspectives of transcultural nurse scholars, leaders, practitioners, and others regarding developments or issues worthy of reflection. It is a means of communicating to readers about current or past ideas that merit intellectual discussion, debate, or clarification ...
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Expanding conceptualizations of culturally competent care
Journal of Advanced Nursing, 2001Expanding conceptualizations of culturally competent care Aim. The aim of the study was to gain an understanding of cultural competence from the perspectives of non‐mainstream nurse educators, specifically those of Latin heritage. Background/Rationale. Although the theoretical concepts of ‘cultural diversity’ and ‘culturally competent care’ have been
M K, Canales, B J, Bowers
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Cultural Competent Patient-Centered Nursing Care
Nursing Clinics of North America, 2015This article provides a theoretic framework for culturally diverse practice, provides a model for developing cultural competency, and provides best-practice guidelines for conducting a cultural assessment on patients to identify their diverse needs to integrate into a patient-centered plan of care.
Linda K, Darnell, Shondell V, Hickson
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Strategic Implications of Culturally Competent Care
The Health Care Manager, 2004Providing culturally competent care has implications for health care managers and their organizations that go beyond a simple clinical perspective. The article defines culturally competent care and suggests what the specific strategic implications of delivering such care are.
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