Transcultural Concepts in Nursing CareLippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2003 - 573 pages Now in its Fourth Edition, this transcultural nursing text conveys the importance of diverse cultural knowledge for the evaluation of patient outcomes, understanding persons in clinical settings and appropriate responses to clinical situations during the nurse/client interaction. Detailed theory is discussed and each chapter contains awareness exercises to ensure comprehension of the nursing role as trusted health care providers. Coverage includes cultural variation in lifestyle, communication and beliefs. New to this edition is a two-color design; revised content on assessment and applications of concepts; a new chapter on culturally appropriate interventions; and, more case studies, research studies and clinical vignettes. |
Contents
Culturally Competent Nursing Care | 15 |
The Influence of Cultural and Health Belief Systems | 73 |
PART 2 | 82 |
Across the Lifespan | 93 |
Transcultural Perspectives in the Nursing Care | 132 |
Transcultural Nursing Care of Older Adults | 209 |
PART 3 | 232 |
Nursing in Multicultural Health Care Settings | 247 |
Common terms and phrases
activities adolescents Afghan African Americans Amish Asian behavior beliefs and practices birth Black blood Buddhism Canada caregivers child church clinical context cross-cultural cultural assessment cultural groups cultural values culturally appropriate culturally competent culturally congruent culturally diverse death decisions differences disease diverse cultures effective elderly ethnic EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE example experience extended family factors family members healing health and illness Health Canada health care health care providers health nursing Hispanic hospital human identify immigrants important individual infant influence interventions Journal Leininger Lipson living medicine mental health Mexican American mother multicultural Native American Native North American needs nursing assessment older adults older clients organization pain parents patients person perspective physical population pregnancy professional programs promote refugees relationships religion religious responses role social society spiritual symptoms tion traditional transcultural nursing tural U.S. Census Bureau United White women