AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated how Turkish nursing students perceive caring for culturally different patients, highlighting the increasing necessity for culturally competent nursing due to rising migration.
  • Key findings revealed that while students recognized cultural differences, they struggled to apply this understanding practically in nursing and felt unprepared for multicultural environments.
  • The study suggests that nursing education needs to incorporate more on-the-ground experiences with diverse cultural groups and emphasizes the adoption of policies that promote culturally safe care in healthcare settings.

Article Abstract

Aim: This study explored Turkish nursing students' perceptions of providing care to patients culturally different from themselves.

Background: Increasing migration will increase the need for nurses to provide care across cultural groups.

Methods: Twenty one students in the second year of a 4-year nursing programme participated in 3 focus groups. Data were analysed using directed content analysis. Research questions were based on Campinha-Bacote's model.

Results: Three themes were identified: perceived cultural barriers, perceived cultural facilitators and identifying culturally sensitive actions. Generally, students were able to define culture but were unable to say how culture would affect nursing practice.

Discussion: Students were unprepared to practice in a multicultural setting. Cultural awareness is insufficient for determining how to respond to cultural differences.

Limitations: The study is limited by its restriction to a single school of nursing and a single curriculum.

Conclusions: The multiple, ongoing political, religious and ethnic conflicts will require nurses to provide care to patients from other cultural groups, in some instances to people identified as adversaries to the group the nurse may represent. Understanding cultural differences is insufficient to do this effectively.

Implications For Nursing Education: Learning culturally competent care requires opportunities to provide, be guided through and reflect on care to individuals from different cultural groups.

Implications For Organizational And Public Policies: Standards for culturally competent care should be adopted by all care delivery settings. Public and organizational policies openly declaring healthcare settings as cultural safe zones, and explicit organizational commitment to culturally safe care, would set clear expectations for providers and help ensure a positive patient experience.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/inr.12321DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cultural
10
care
8
care patients
8
nurses provide
8
provide care
8
perceived cultural
8
culturally competent
8
competent care
8
nursing
6
culturally
5

Similar Publications

To clarify the cause of graded distribution of sucrose in apple fruit flesh, a quarter cut of young apple fruit was cultured for 72 h on agar-solidified MS medium supplemented with 0.5 M [1-C]sorbitol, with the longitudinal or horizontal cut face being attached with the medium, and distribution of C-labelled sucrose in a specimen obtained by slicing the fruit along with the cut face was visualized utilizing MALDI-TOF MSI. Heat map images on the distribution of the peaks of sorbitol containing C-atom indicated that external [1-C]sorbitol had penetrated evenly into the tissue.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Galectin-3 secreted by triple-negative breast cancer cells regulates T cell function.

Neoplasia

December 2024

Felsenstein Medical Research Center, Beilinson Campus, Petah Tikva, Israel; Tel Aviv University, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Tel Aviv, Israel; Rabin Medical Center, Beilinson Campus, Petah Tikva, Israel; Davidoff Cancer Center, Beilinson Campus, Petah Tikva, Israel. Electronic address:

Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is an aggressive subtype that accounts for 10-15 % of breast cancer. Current treatment of high-risk early-stage TNBC includes neoadjuvant chemo-immune therapy. However, the substantial variation in immune response prompts an urgent need for new immune-targeting agents.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Effects of immersion bathing in Lactobacillus plantarum CLY-05 on the growth performance, non-specific immune enzyme activities and gut microbiota of Apostichopus japonicus.

PLoS One

December 2024

Key Laboratory of Sustainable and Development of Marine Fisheries, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Yellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences, Qingdao, PR China.

In order to study the optimal use of Lactobacillus plantarum in sea cucumber (Apostichopus japonicus), 49 days feeding trial was conducted to determine the influence of immersion bathing in different concentrations of Lactobacillus plantarum CLY-05 on body weight gain rate and non-specific immune activities. The potential effect of CLY-05 on gut microbiota was also analyzed during the immersion bathing at the optimum concentration. The results showed that the body weight growth rate of all bathing groups was higher than that of control.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The gastrointestinal tract is a prominent portal of entry for HIV-1 during sexual or perinatal transmission, as well as a major site of HIV-1 persistence and replication. Elucidation of underlying mechanisms of intestinal HIV-1 infection are thus needed for the advancement of HIV-1 curative therapies. Here, we present a human 2D intestinal immuno-organoid system to model HIV-1 disease that recapitulates tissue compartmentalization and epithelial-immune cellular interactions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Millions of tons of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) are produced each year, however only ~30% of PET is currently recycled in the United States. Improvement of PET recycling and upcycling practices is an area of ongoing research. One method for PET upcycling is chemical depolymerization (through hydrolysis or aminolysis) into aromatic monomers and subsequent biodegradation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!