| Literature DB >> 15821302 |
Dean E Sidelinger1, Dodi Meyer, Gregory S Blaschke, Patricia Hametz, Milagros Batista, Rachel Salguero, Vivian Reznik.
Abstract
A patient's culture has an effect on her or his view of illness, decision to seek care, and adherence to treatment plans and follow-up visits. In this article, we describe community-academic partnerships designed to teach improved delivery of culturally effective care conducted in pediatric residency training programs in New York, New York, and San Diego, California. Columbia University-Children's Hospital of New York-Presbyterian focuses most of residents' cultural-training experiences within 1 community program, a home-visitation program (Best Beginnings) with which residents work in various capacities throughout residency. The University of California, San Diego and Naval Medical Center San Diego use a series of cultural "immersion experiences" as a primary method. The creation of community-academic partnerships for the purpose of service and training can be a critical asset in the development of culturally effective care training: community partners become teachers and local communities serve as classrooms.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15821302 DOI: 10.1542/peds.2004-2825L
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatrics ISSN: 0031-4005 Impact factor: 7.124