Literature DB >> 16265804

Role dilemmas among health-workers in cross-cultural patient encounters around dietary advice.

Rønnaug A A Fagerli1, Marianne E Lien, Grete S Botten, Margareta Wandel.   

Abstract

AIM: The aim of this paper is to explore Norwegian health workers' experiences from cross-cultural patient encounters, and how they understand and enact their role when meeting patients with Pakistani background to whom they give dietary advice related to type 2 diabetes.
METHODS: Qualitative in-depth interviews have been performed with six hospital dietitians and six general practitioners in Oslo.
RESULTS: The health workers consider themselves to be patient-centred and stress the importance of the two dimensions, empathy and equality. However, they often experience that patients want them to be more authoritarian, a way of acting that would be totally in disagreement with their convictions, although some occasionally do adopt an authoritarian style. More striking is that some health workers' moral engagement to involve and empower patients actually leads them to be authoritarian. For others, a fear of insulting the patient results in their advice being too diffuse.
CONCLUSIONS: A possible explanation for such ways of responding to the patient may be that the health workers, in their articulation of patient-centredness, draw on a repertoire of social conduct that involves an effort to level out, or tacitly deny, hierarchic structures, and that this becomes more pronounced in cross-cultural encounters. Patient-centredness and empowerment are results of long ongoing processes in Western countries, based on ideals of equality and individual freedom. The results from this study indicate that these approaches may pose intricate dilemmas for the health workers in their cross-cultural encounters, and need further attention.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16265804     DOI: 10.1080/14034940510005888

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scand J Public Health        ISSN: 1403-4948            Impact factor:   3.021


  5 in total

1.  Customer interest in and experience with various types of pharmacy counselling - a qualitative study.

Authors:  Susanne Kaae; Janine M Traulsen; Lotte S Nørgaard
Journal:  Health Expect       Date:  2012-10-01       Impact factor: 3.377

2.  Does the "stages of change" construct predict cross-sectional and temporal variations in dietary behavior and selected indicators of diabetes risk among Norwegian-Pakistani women?

Authors:  M K Råberg Kjøllesdal; G Holmboe-Ottesen; M Wandel
Journal:  J Immigr Minor Health       Date:  2013-02

3.  Designing and Developing a Mobile Smartphone Application for Women with Gestational Diabetes Mellitus Followed-Up at Diabetes Outpatient Clinics in Norway.

Authors:  Lisa Maria Garnweidner-Holme; Iren Borgen; Iñaki Garitano; Josef Noll; Mirjam Lukasse
Journal:  Healthcare (Basel)       Date:  2015-05-21

4.  Gestational Diabetes Mellitus: Clinical Characteristics and Perinatal Outcomes in a Multiethnic Population of North Italy.

Authors:  M Caputo; V Bullara; C Mele; M T Samà; M Zavattaro; A Ferrero; T Daffara; I Leone; G Giachetti; V Antoniotti; D Longo; A De Pedrini; P Marzullo; V Remorgida; F Prodam; G Aimaretti
Journal:  Int J Endocrinol       Date:  2021-12-26       Impact factor: 3.257

5.  Changes in dietary habits after migration and consequences for health: a focus on South Asians in Europe.

Authors:  Gerd Holmboe-Ottesen; Margareta Wandel
Journal:  Food Nutr Res       Date:  2012-11-06       Impact factor: 3.894

  5 in total

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