Understand nurse's perspectives on communication with Chinese-speaking cardiac patients.

Patient Educ Couns

Charles Perkins Centre, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, NSW, Australia; Heart Research Institute, 7 Eliza Street, Newtown, NSW, Australia.

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • Nurses need to understand and communicate better with Chinese-speaking patients, but face challenges like language barriers and cultural differences.
  • Many nurses rely on interpreters, but there are issues like not enough interpreters and low-quality communication resources.
  • To improve care for Chinese patients, nurses should have better interpreting services and cultural training so they can understand their patients' needs more effectively.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To explore communication experiences, resource accessibility/quality, and communication strategies cardiac nurses use when caring for Chinese-speaking patients.

Methods: In this exploratory qualitative study, nurses were recruited from professional association members and interviewed on communication barriers/facilitators, resource accessibility/quality, and communication strategies used when caring for Chinese-speaking cardiac patients. Transcripts were thematically analysed.

Results: Nurses (n = 11) were primarily female (7/11), with 2/11 Chinese-speaking. The themes discussed centred on two areas that created difficulty in communication, including the lack of a common language and uncertainty of the Chinese culture. Dependence on interpreters was highlighted and challenges noted included limited availability and difficulty scheduling, variable quality and approaches, and lack of communication resources leading to a dependence on poor quality materials. Nurses were uncertain about Chinese culture and how to communicate, particularly in relation to family-centred beliefs, mental and sexual health, medication, and diet.

Conclusions: Health communication with Chinese-speaking patients needs to address multiple challenges to be effective.

Practice Implications: The findings emphasise the need to optimise interpreting services and provide nurses with cultural competency training and tailored resources to improve their understanding of Chinese immigrants' needs. These recommendations will support nurses to address identified language and cultural uncertainties.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pec.2024.108405DOI Listing

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