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Rethinking cultural competence

Laurence J. Kirmayer
- 01 Apr 2012 - 
- Vol. 49, Iss: 2, pp 149-164
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TLDR
This issue of Transcultural Psychiatry presents papers from the McGill Advanced study Institute in Cultural Psychiatry on ‘‘Rethinking Cultural Competence from International Perspectives,’’ which was held in Montreal, April 27 and 28, 2010, and shows how conceptual analysis and critique of cultural competence can point toward ways to improve the cultural responsiveness, appropriateness and effectiveness of clinical services, and in doing so contribute to reducing health disparities.
Abstract
In recent years, cultural competence has become a popular term for a variety ofstrategies to address the challenge of cultural diversity in mental health services.This issue of Transcultural Psychiatry presents papers from the McGill AdvancedStudy Institute in Cultural Psychiatry on ‘‘Rethinking Cultural Competencefrom International Perspectives,’’ which was held in Montreal, April 27and 28, 2010. Selected papers from the meeting have been supplemented withother contributions to the journal that fit the theme. Taken together, thesepapers show how conceptual analysis and critique of cultural competence canpoint toward ways to improve the cultural responsiveness, appropriateness andeffectiveness of clinical services, and in doing so contribute to reducinghealth disparities.Cultural diversity poses challenges to mental health services for many reasons.Culture influences the experience, expression, course and outcome of mentalhealth problems, help-seeking and the response to health promotion, preventionor treatment interventions. The clinical encounter is shaped by differencesbetween patient and clinician in social position and power, which are associatedwith differences in cultural knowledge and identity, language, religion and otheraspects of cultural identity. Specific ethnocultural or racialized groups may sufferhealth disparities and social disadvantage as a result of the meanings and mater-ial consequences of their socially constructed identities. In some instances, cul-tural processes may create or constitute unique social and psychological problemsor predicaments that deserve clinical attention. In culturally diverse societies,the dominant culture, which is expressed through social institutions, includingthe health care system, regulates what sorts of problems are recognized and whatkinds of social or cultural differences are viewed as worthy of attention.A large literature shows the importance of social determinants of healthincluding social status, employment, education, wealth and social support

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Satisfaction with mental health treatment among patients with a non-Western migrant background: a survey in a Danish specialized outpatient mental health clinic.

TL;DR: Implications for practice based on the findings are to enhance person-centred care and shared decision-making with all patients regardless of cultural background and to prioritize pre- and postgraduate training in cultural competences and cultural humility for healthcare providers.
Dissertation

Towards a cross-cultural psychotherapeutic framework for Psychologists working with Western Australian Aboriginal people

James McCloy
TL;DR: Aboriginal people are disadvantaged on a variety of key mental health indicators including rates of depression, suicide, and self-harm, and despite the disadvantage, there are few studies informing the systematic and effective use of existing empirically supported treatments with Indigenous clients as mentioned in this paper.

Psychological services for asylum seekers in the community: Challenges and solutions

TL;DR: The findings indicated that participants perceived that clients experienced psychological, health, and cultural difficulties, and the stress and uncertainty around visa applications emerged as the most severe factor impacting asylum seekers' mental health.
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Approaches and Recommendations for Improving The Cultural Competence in Nursing

TL;DR: Hemsirelerin kulturel yeterliligini gelistirmeye yonelik yaklasim ve onerileri iceren Turkce literatur oldukca sinirli olup bu derlemenin bu alandaki boslugu kapatmada onemli olacagi dusunulmektedir.
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A Framework for Enabling Evidence-based Practice in Allied Health

TL;DR: This qualitative study examined EBP with allied health managers and practitioners in a health service network to highlight the systemic nature of EBP and the extent to which it involves both individual and environmental attributes.
References
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Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

TL;DR: In this article, a panel of experts documents this evidence and explores how persons of color experience the health care environment, examining how disparities in treatment may arise in health care systems and looking at aspects of the clinical encounter that may contribute to such disparities.
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Cultural Humility Versus Cultural Competence: A Critical Distinction in Defining Physician Training Outcomes in Multicultural Education

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Journal ArticleDOI

Defining cultural competence: a practical framework for addressing racial/ethnic disparities in health and health care.

TL;DR: A framework of organizational, structural, and clinical cultural competence interventions can facilitate the elimination of racial/ethnic disparities in health and improve care for all Americans.
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