Madeleine Leininger recognized cultural differences between patients and nurses in the 1950s and established transcultural nursing as a field of study. The Transcultural Nursing Society was founded in 1974 to promote education in transcultural concepts. As the U.S. population becomes more diverse, with minorities projected to outnumber whites by 2020, nurses must adapt to provide culturally competent care to an increasingly heterogeneous society. Transcultural nursing aims to deliver meaningful care according to a client's cultural values and context through cultural assessment and consideration of how culture influences health beliefs and practices.
Madeleine Leininger recognized cultural differences between patients and nurses in the 1950s and established transcultural nursing as a field of study. The Transcultural Nursing Society was founded in 1974 to promote education in transcultural concepts. As the U.S. population becomes more diverse, with minorities projected to outnumber whites by 2020, nurses must adapt to provide culturally competent care to an increasingly heterogeneous society. Transcultural nursing aims to deliver meaningful care according to a client's cultural values and context through cultural assessment and consideration of how culture influences health beliefs and practices.
Madeleine Leininger recognized cultural differences between patients and nurses in the 1950s and established transcultural nursing as a field of study. The Transcultural Nursing Society was founded in 1974 to promote education in transcultural concepts. As the U.S. population becomes more diverse, with minorities projected to outnumber whites by 2020, nurses must adapt to provide culturally competent care to an increasingly heterogeneous society. Transcultural nursing aims to deliver meaningful care according to a client's cultural values and context through cultural assessment and consideration of how culture influences health beliefs and practices.
Madeleine Leininger recognized cultural differences between patients and nurses in the 1950s and established transcultural nursing as a field of study. The Transcultural Nursing Society was founded in 1974 to promote education in transcultural concepts. As the U.S. population becomes more diverse, with minorities projected to outnumber whites by 2020, nurses must adapt to provide culturally competent care to an increasingly heterogeneous society. Transcultural nursing aims to deliver meaningful care according to a client's cultural values and context through cultural assessment and consideration of how culture influences health beliefs and practices.
The key takeaways are the introduction of transcultural nursing, its history starting from Madeleine Leininger in the 1950s, and the need for culturally competent care as the US population becomes more diverse.
The history of transcultural nursing started in the 1950s when Madeleine Leininger noted cultural differences between patients and nurses while working with children. She is known as the founder of transcultural nursing and formulated the theory. The Transcultural Nursing Society was also founded in 1974 to promote transcultural concepts.
Some models used in transcultural nursing include Leininger's Sunrise Model which depicts how culture influences health and illness, and Giger and Davidhizar's Transcultural Assessment Model which views transcultural nursing as a culturally competent practice field. Other tools discussed include Outline of Cultural Materials and Brownlee's Community, Culture, and Care guide.
INTRODUCTION
TO TRANSCULTURAL NURSING
JONAH LYDIA G. LANGGA, RN, MN, DPA, FANSAP
HISTORY OF TRANSCULTURAL NURSING In 1950’s, Madeleine M. Leininger, known as the Founder of Transcultural Nursing, noted cultural differences between patients and nurses while working with emotionally disturbed children.
She recognized that health and illness
states are strongly influenced by culture and formulated the theory. The Transcultural Nursing Society, founded in 1974, is promoting interest in transcultural concepts and the education of transcultural nurses at the graduate level (Giger & Davidhizar, 2002; Wenger, 1989).
Since its inception, the society has promoted such
efforts at annual transcultural nursing conferences in different worldwide locations. The society also implemented the first certification plan in transcultural nursing. NEED FOR TRANSCULTURAL NURSING KNOWLEDGE It is observed that the United States is rapidly becoming a multicultural, pluralistic society. In 2010, 72.4% of the population in the United States was White of European descent; 14% African – American; 17.3% Hispanic – American; 4.8% Asian American; and 0.9% American Indian (US Department of Commerce, Bureau of Census, 2010 Census Briefs, 2011).
It is projected that in 2020, only 53% will be White of
European descendant. By end of 2021, the number of Asian Americans and Hispanic – Americans will triple, and African – Americans will double. In light of these statistical data, it is imperative that the nursing workforce rapidly adapt itself to a changing heterogeneous society.
Providing culturally appropriate and thus
competent care in the twenty-first century will be a complex and difficult task for many nurses.
But when nurses consider race, ethnicity, culture
and culture heritage, they then become more sensitive to clients. CULTURAL ASSESSMENT According to Affonso (1979), cultural assessment can give meaning to behaviors that might otherwise be judged negatively. If cultural behaviors are not appropriately identified, their significance will be confusing to the nurse. USING OF NON – NURSING MODELS Outline of Cultural Materials by Murdock, et al. (2004) – One of the most comprehensive tool used for nursing cultural assessment; however, this tool was developed primarily for anthropologists who were concerned with ethnographic descriptions of cultural groups. Thus, this tool does not provide for systematic use of the nursing process.
Brownlee’s (1978) Community, Culture, and Care: A Cross-Cultural
Guide for Health Workers – Devoted to the process of practical assessment of a community, with specific attention given to health areas. Brownlee’s work deals with three aspects of assessment: what to find out, why is it important, and how to do it. USING OF NURSING SPECIFIC MODELS Transcultural Nursing is defined by Leininger (1991; Leininger & McFarland, 2006) as a “humanistic and scientific area of formal study and practice which is focused upon differences and similarities among cultures with respect to human care, health, and illness based upon the people’s cultural values, beliefs, and practices.”
Leininger’s Sunrise Model (1997) symbolizes the rising of the sun
(care). The model depicts a full sun with four levels of foci, and has components on social structure and worldview factors that influence care and health through language and environment. DEFINITION OF TRANSCULTURAL NURSING TRANSCULTURAL NURSING is defined as a learned subfield or branch of nursing which focuses upon the comparative study and analysis of cultures with respect to nursing and health- illness caring practices, beliefs, and values with the goal to provide meaningful and efficacious nursing care services to people according to their cultural values and health-illness context. In the context of Giger and Davidhizar’s Transcultural Assessment Mode (1990, 2002), transcultural nursing is viewed as a culturally competent practice field that is client centered and research focused. Although transcultural nursing is viewed as client centered, it is important for nurses to remember that culture can and does influence how clients are viewed and the care that is rendered. Every individual is culturally unique, and nurses are no exception to this premise. Nonetheless, nurse must use caution to avoid projecting on the client their own cultural uniqueness and worldviews if culturally appropriate care is to be provided.
Nurses must carefully discern personal
cultural beliefs and values to separate them from the client’s beliefs and values. According to Stokes (1991), nursing as a profession is not “culturally free” but rather is “culturally determine.” Nurses must recognize and understand this fact to avoid becoming grossly ethnocentric. Because there is a contingent relationship between cultural determination and the delivery of culturally sensitive care, the transcultural nurse must be guided by acquired knowledge in the assessment, diagnosis, planning, implementation and evaluation of the client’s needs based on culturally relevant information. Although transcultural nursing is becoming a highly specialized field of specially educated individuals, every nurse, regardless of academic or experiential background, must use transcultural knowledge to facilitate culturally appropriate care.
Every nurse must make every effort to deliver
culturally sensitive care that is free of inherent biases based on gender, race or religion. Thank you for listening!!!