| Literature DB >> 33172461 |
Imane Semlali1, Emmanuel Tamches2, Pascal Singy3, Orest Weber3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The linguistic and cultural diversity found in European societies creates specific challenges to palliative care clinicians. Patients' heterogeneous habits, beliefs and social situations, and in many cases language barriers, add complexity to clinicians' work. Cross-cultural teaching helps palliative care specialists deal with issues that arise from such diversity. This study aimed to provide interested educators and decision makers with ideas for how to implement cross-cultural training in palliative care.Entities:
Keywords: Communication; Cross-cultural training; Cultural competence; Cultural sensitivity; Palliative care
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33172461 PMCID: PMC7656760 DOI: 10.1186/s12904-020-00678-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Focus-group participants’ information
| Focus groups | Attendees | Status |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 6 | Physician, unit leader, teacher (palliative care) Physician, teacher (palliative care) Psychologist, specialist in intercultural psychology Medical anthropologist, teacher in cross-cultural competence Physician, head of migrant health program Chaplain |
| 2 | 7 | Physician, service leader, teacher (palliative care) Physician, (palliative care/geriatrics) Psychiatrist, migrant care unit Anthropologist, specialist in palliative care Senior nurse, training manager (palliative care) Physician, head of Psychiatry, specialist in cross-cultural psychiatry Chaplain |
| 3 | 7 | Physician, unit leader (palliative care) Physician, service leader, teacher (palliative care/oncology) Senior nurse, teacher (palliative care) Sociologist, migration specialist Senior nurse, training manager (palliative care) Doctor in social science, migration specialist Theologist, specialist in religious minority |
| 4 | 6 | Physician, training manager (oncology/palliative care) Physician, service leader (palliative care) Senior nurse, training manager (palliative care, cross-cultural clinic) Senior nurse, training manager (geriatrics) Senior nurse, cross-cultural clinic specialist Chaplain |
Categories of content of the focus-group transcripts
| Background knowledge: | 63 |
| Introduction into culture and health | 8 |
| Range of patients’ and relatives’ expectations/perceptions | 34 |
| Basic information for clinical practice | 21 |
| Communication tools/techniques for patient-centred care: | 48 |
| Investigating patient’s reality/projects/needs | 16 |
| Handling inhibitions | 6 |
| Interpreting forms of cultural expressions | 4 |
| Managing tensions between patient and health care system | 4 |
| Establishing rapport | 2 |
| Displaying commitment in communication | 2 |
| Embracing a human attitude (savoir-être) | 2 |
| Overcoming language barriers | 2 |
| Listening | 1 |
| Negotiating institutional rules | 1 |
| Managing non-verbal communication | 1 |
| Explaining palliative care to culturally diverse patients | 1 |
| Collaboration: | 10 |
| Interprofessional collaboration | 3 |
| Collaboration with relatives | 7 |
| Reflection on culture and values: | 26 |
| Cultural diversity among clinicians | 8 |
| Self-reflection (impact of clinicians’ own culture and stereotypes) | 8 |
| Tensions that result from cultural difference | 6 |
| Integration of transcultural training into existing training programs | 43 |
| Undergraduate education | 14 |
| Postgraduate education | 9 |
| Interprofessional continuing education | 20 |
| In palliative care | 16 |
| In cross-cultural care | 4 |
| Intervention throughout the training curriculum | 6 |
| Extensions beyond specialised palliative care | 13 |
| Cross-cultural education for related medical fields | 8 |
| Introduction on palliative care for interpreters and experts in cross-cultural care | 3 |
| Cross-cultural education for non-specialized palliative care | 2 |
| Interprofessional training (e.g. Congresses, Symposia, Seminars) | 14 |
| Differentiation of training according to disciplines | 9 |
| Risks | 8 |
| Clinicians’ lack of time for continuing education | 4 |
| Low motivation because of lack of time spent with patients | 2 |
| Overfilled palliative care curricula | 1 |
| Overfilled undergraduate medical curricula | 1 |
| Face-to-face theoretical teaching (Lectures) | 7 |
| Practical training | 19 |
| Workshops with case discussions | 6 |
| Role plays | 6 |
| Immersive experiences | 6 |
| Comparative approaches of two cultures | 1 |
| Interprofessional work experience | 4 |
| Coaching | 17 |
| Supervisions, colloquia | 11 |
| Mentoring | 4 |
| Exemplarity | 2 |
| Independent learning | 2 |
| Training tools | 5 |
| Toolbox (leaflets, catalogues) | 2 |
| Platforms health and spirituality’ | 1 |
| Telecommunication tools | 1 |
| E-learning platforms | 1 |