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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper discusses the impact a patient's culture can have on their understanding and acceptance of health care procedures. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVCulPat.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
approach to patients is in appropriate. This paper considers the impact of culture on health care, with specific groups mentioned. Discussion Sutton says that culture "influences the way patients respond
to medical services and preventive interventions. Racial, ethnic and cultural disparities exist in all aspects of society, but nowhere are they more clearly documented than in health care" (Sutton,
2000). Studies have shown that people from diverse racial, ethnic and cultural" backgrounds "suffer disproportionately from cardiovascular disease, diabetes, HIV/AIDS and every form of cancer" (Sutton, 2000). Non-whites generally have
high rates of infant mortality and lower rates of childhood immunization (Sutton, 2000). Poverty and lack of health insurance contribute to the difference in rates of illness between
whites and non-whites, but "health care organizations and individual medical practices are also responsible in that they often fail to provide culturally competent health care" (Sutton, 2000). In order to
provide the best, most appropriate care, health care professionals have to respect their patients diverse cultures, their "values, traditions, history and institutions" (Sutton, 2000). Doing so is not simply being
politically correct, it is absolutely necessary in order to eliminate "health care disparities and ... [provide] high-quality patient care" (Sutton, 2000). An individuals culture shapes their perceptions, decisions, experiences, and
"how they relate to others. It influences the way patients respond to medical services and preventive interventions and impacts the way physicians deliver those services" (Sutton, 2000). Because it impacts
every aspect of a persons life, it shapes the way they will respond to, and participate in, the health care experience. Mark Cichocki, a Registered Nurse, provides a guide to
various ethnic groups for health care professionals. He writes that it is appropriate to address African-American patients formally, using honorific and last name ("Mr. Smith, Mrs. Jones"), especially if the
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