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CECILY RODRIGUEZ

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Title: CECILY RODRIGUEZ


1
Ensuring Quality Service Provision for the Latino
Community A Cultural Context
  • CECILY RODRIGUEZ
  • DIRECTOR,
  • OFFICE OF CULTURAL AND LINGUISTIC COMPETENCY
  • DEPARTMENT OF MENTAL HEALTH, MENTAL RETARDATION,
    SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES

2
Learning Objectives
  • I. Understand the general demographic history of
    Latin America and its implications for
    contemporary Latin American culture.

3
Learning Objectives
  • II. Acquire an understanding of some fundamental
    characteristics of the Latino population in the US

4
Learning Objectives
  • III. Identify some central cultural traits and
    their origins in Latin American/Latino
    populations, including the roles of Catholicism,
    language, social class and deference, and gender.

5
Learning Objectives
  • IV. Introduction to some of the mandates,
    standards, and recommendations related to working
    with Latinos who are limited English proficient.

6
A Word about Cultural Competence.
  • There are five abilities that are considered
    necessary to achieve individual cultural
    competence
  • We value diversity
  • We are able to understand our own cultural views
    (and those of our affiliated organizations and
    systems)
  • We are aware of how culture may be affecting a
    life situation
  • We are willing and able to learn about other
    cultures
  • We are able to change our behavior to meet the
    needs of others and other cultures

7
I. demographic history
  • Indo-America
  • Highlands, home of densest pre-C. populations
  • parts of Mexico, Guatemala, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia

8
I. demographic history
  • Euro-America
  • Sparse pre-C. population destroyed or removed
  • European immigration
  • Argentina, Uruguay, Costa Rica

9
I. demographic history
  • Afro-America
  • pre-C population destroyed or removed
  • African migrations
  • Brazil, Caribbean islands and coasts, U.S.

10
I. demographic history
  • Mestizo-America
  • Assimilation of pre-C population
  • Northern Mexico, parts of Central America,
    Colombia, Venezuela, Paraguay, Chile

11
Push and Pull Factors
  • Most large migrations are the result of both
    pressures to leave the point of departure and
    attraction towards the destination.

12
Push Factors may be
  • Political. Warfare, violence, persecution,
    forced migration, marginalization.
  • Economic. Poverty, lack of opportunities, land
    scarcity.
  • Climatic/environmental.

13
Pull Factors may be
  • Political
  • Economic
  • Cultural/linguistic ties
  • Kinship/social networks
  • Labor recruitment

14
Changing Communities
  • Migration brings people, languages, cultures, and
    religions into contact.
  • There are many possible outcomes, from hostility
    and violence, to peaceful co-existence.
  • Contact with other ways of being challenges both
    individual and collective identities.

15
A young population
  • 35 under 18 years old
  • (compare with 23 non-Hispanic white rate)
  • 5 65 years or older
  • (compare with 14 non-Hispanic white rate)

16
A disadvantaged population
  • More likely to be unemployed
  • More likely to work in service or labor
  • More likely to earn less
  • More likely to live in poverty (23 v. 8)
  • Less likely to have finished high school

17
U.S. vs. Foreign Born
  • 60 of the Hispanic population was born in the
    United States
  • Of the 40 foreign born
  • 27 arrived before 1980
  • 30 arrived in the 1980s
  • 43 arrived in the 1990s

18
Distribution by origin
19
Limited English Proficiency
20
Length of Residence in U.S.
  • Very important to consider length of residence in
    the U.S. among Hispanics to fully understand many
    trends. Census data does not take in this
    information. If data on recent arrivals is mixed
    in with data on residents, the total results will
    be skewed.

21
Length of Residence in U.S.
  • When we separate out the data on foreign-born
    Hispanics, the data, on earnings for example,
    approximate the majority population.
  • Statistics on immigrants show that within 10-20
    years, earning gaps disappear.

22
Who is Hispanic/Latino?
  • Term conflates diverse populations
  • History of Mexicans in Southwest distinct from
    Puerto Rico
  • Long-term residents with recent arrivals
  • Émigrés from El Salvador vs. émigrés from Cuba
  • Term homogenizes class experiences and neglects
    many different linguistic, racial, and ethnic
    groups (Delgado Stefancic)

23
Who is Hispanic/Latino?
  • A person is of Spanish/Hispanic origin if the
    persons origin (ancestry) is Mexican,
    Mexican-American, Chicano, Puerto Rican,
    Dominican, Ecuadorian, Guatemalan, Honduran,
    Nicaraguan, Peruvian, Salvadoran from other
    Spanish-speaking countries of the Caribbean or
    Central or South America or from Spain.
  • (U.S. Bureau of the Census, Population Division,
    DEVELOPMENT OF THE RACE AND ETHNIC ITEMS FOR THE
    1990 CENSUS 51 New Orleans Population
    Association of American, 1998 cited by Oboler in
    Delgado Stefancic, 1998)

24
Definition 2
  • A Hispanic is a person who descends from Spanish
    forebears or from one of the many cultures in the
    world that owe their origins to Spain. The term
    comes from Hispania, the Latin word for Spain
    used by the ancient Romans, who conquered that
    region in the second century BC. A Hispanic
    American is a Hispanic who is a citizen or
    resident of the United States.
  • (Ochoa, G. Amazing Hispanic American History, New
    York John Wiley Sons, 1998)

25
Definition 3
  • The vague concept of Hispanicity depends on an
    often-unarticulated agreement among users of the
    terms (Latino and Hispanic) that different
    Hispanic national cultures share experiences,
    which is not always the case. We do believe that
    there exists a limited, shared Hispanic or Latino
    experience, consisting of linguist background
    (Castilian Spanish), cultural mythography
    (Catholicism and pre-Columbian folklore), and
    political disaffection (discrimination and
    disempowerment).
  • (Augenbraum Stavans, Growing Up Latino, 1993,
    p. xxii.)

26
Latino vs. Hispanic
  • Both terms are commonly used and to a large
    degree are interchangeable. The use of Hispanic
    is probably more institutional, conservative and
    external, while Latino/a is used in more
    individual, liberal and internal contexts.
    According to Ochoa (1998) Latino/a has been
    championed as preferable to Hispanic for two
    reasons

27
Reason 1
  • Hispanic is an invented word in English with a
    pseudo-scientific sound to it, with the ic
    ending, like metric system or sulfuric acid.
    Latino/a is a Spanish word, and is already used
    by many people to describe themselves.

28
Reason 2
  • Others say that Hispanic is derived from Spanish
    word, hispano, meaning derived from Spain. Some
    feel that this direct reference to Spain is
    misleading, since the cultural and historical
    link is stronger to Latin America. However,
    Latin ultimately comes from the Romans, the
    cultural ancestors of the Spaniards, so
    ultimately, there seems no clear solution.
    Currently both terms are used interchangeably,
    with preference given to Latino/a.

29
Chicano
  • Synonymous with Mexican-American, and is derived
    from the Spanish word for Mexican,
    mexicano/mejicano. Originally a derogatory
    term used by non-Chicanos, it has since been
    appropriated by Chicanos as a term of pride.

30
Religion
  • Spanish and Portuguese brought Roman Catholicism,
    which overlaid, accommodated and blended with
    local indigenous and later, African practices.
  • Examples
  • Santería
  • Condomblé
  • Costumbre

31
Santería
32
Condomblé
33
Costumbre
34
Catholism
35
The Religious Marketplace
  • Rates of Protestant conversion have grown rapidly
    in the last 20 years.
  • Brazil, Guatemala and Puerto Rico have some of
    the highest rates.
  • Charismatic Catholicism responds to the growing
    appeal of Protestant churches.

36
Language
  • Spanish (or Portuguese) is the official national
    language of most countries.
  • Indigenous Languages
  • Experts report between 550 and 700 indigenous
    languages for the whole region today, from about
    1,750 before the European invasions.

37
Indigenous Languages
  • Examples include
  • Nahuatl Mexico
  • Mayan languages Mexico and Guatemala
  • Mixtec Oaxaca, Mexico
  • Purépecha Michoacán, Mexico
  • Quechua Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia

38
African Language Impact
  • Creole languages spoken in the Caribbean Basin
  • Vocabulary of African origin in Spanish and
    Portuguese in Latin America.

39
Social Class
  • Latin America and the Caribbean have the greatest
    disparities in income distribution in the world.
  • The correlation between race/ethnicity and social
    class is significant but not uniform.

40
Deference
  • Deference and politeness are highly valued in
    social interactions, especially in the highlands,
    and manifest in behavior (especially language).
  • Courtesy
  • Prelude and Indirectness

41
Gender Roles
  • In general, gender roles are both more rigid and
    more complementary in Latin America than in North
    America.
  • Most economic indicators of gender equality (e.g.
    education, employment, salary rates) reveal
    gender disparities.

42
Machismo
  • American anthropologists define as "The cult of
    virility, the chief characteristics of which are
    exaggerated aggressiveness and intransigence in
    male-to-male interpersonal relationships and
    arrogance and sexual aggression in male-to-female
    relations" (Stevens 1973).
  • In Latin America, the term macho usually must be
    distinguished from that of machismo.
  • Macho has different meanings in different social
    circumstances sometimes it refers simply to the
    male of a species, whether animal or plant. In
    other cultural contexts "to be macho" can have
    contradictory connotations
  • for older generations this may refer to something
    positive for men to emulate, so that a macho man
    is one who is responsible for the financial
    welfare of his family

43
Marianismo
  • Is an aspect of the female gender role in the
    machismo of Latin American folk culture. It is
    the veneration for feminine virtues like purity,
    moral strength, etc., e.g. it represents the
    "virgin" aspect of the virgin-whore dichotomy.
    Evelyn Stevens states "it teaches that women are
    semi divine, morally superior to and spiritually
    stronger than men.
  • It is a stereotyped, class based, gender role of
    the Latina. A woman's reputation is determined by
    how well she lives up to the example of feminine
    virtue. In some circles, it has now evolved into
    a term used to describe the feminine spiritual
    superiority, moral superiority and spiritual
    strength of the modern Latina.

44
Examples of differences in Macro and Micro
Culture related to Disabilities
  • Micro Culture
  • Sees disability as caused by a spiritual crisis
    (blessing or punishment). May blame an event like
    a susto
  • May take a wait and see approach. They may
    feel that the disability is there for a purpose
    and should not try to cure it.
  • May respond through prayer, talisman, rebalancing
    of the body (through food or drink). Use
    acupuncture or ceremonies to deal with or heal
    the disability.
  • Macro Culture
  • Sees disability caused by medical problems or
    physical trauma perhaps during pregnancy
  • Assumes it is best to do something about the
    disability. The focus in on improving the
    situation
  • Response to disability is to provide treatment
    and research.

45
Federal Mandates, Standards, and Recommendations
for Providing Services for Latinos in Health and
Human Services
  • Title VI Civil Rights Act of 1964- requires all
    agencies and organizations that receive federal
    funding ensure that recipients of their services
    are free from discrimination. Not having access
    to public services because of a language barrier
    equals discrimination.
  • Executive Order 13166 (2000)- Is an extension of
    Title VI, which was created to improve access to
    federally conducted and federally assisted
    programs and activities for persons who, as a
    result of national origin, are limited in their
    English proficiency. It requires that all
    organizations that receive federal dollars
    develop a language access plan that provides
    guidance for working with the LEP community.

46
Federal Mandates, Standards, and Recommendations
for Providing Services for Latinos in Health and
Human Services
  • Institute of Medicine Unequal Treatment
    Report concluded that even when members of
    minority groups have the same incomes, insurance
    coverage and medical conditions as whites, they
    receive notably poorer care. Biases, prejudices
    and negative racial stereotypes, the panel
    concludes, may be misleading doctors and other
    health professionals.
  • Office of Civil Rights (OCR)- enforces Title VI
    and LEP discrimination laws and helps to ensure
    that eligible individuals are not denied or
    deterred from obtaining benefits on the basis of
    their national origin and provides technical
    assistance to healthcare and human services
    providers. OCR conducts investigations to
    determine whether neutral policies or practices
    have a disparate impact on the basis of national
    origin.

47
Federal Mandates, Standards, and Recommendations
for Providing Services for Latinos in Health and
Human Services
  • The Standards on Culturally Linguistically
  • Appropriate Services
  • CLAS mandates are current Federal requirements
    for all recipients of Federal funds (Standards 4,
    5, 6, and 7).
  • CLAS guidelines are activities recommended by OMH
    for adoption as mandates by Federal, State, and
    national accrediting agencies (Standards 1, 2, 3,
    8, 9, 10, 11, 12, and 13).
  • CLAS recommendations are suggested by OMH for
    voluntary adoption by health care organizations
    (Standard 14).

48
Federal Mandates, Standards and Recommendations
for Providing Services for Latinos in Health and
Human Services
  • The National Council on Interpreting in Health
    Care (NCIHC) - Outlined the first National
    Standards for Medical Interpreters in November,
    2005. The NCIHC's National Standards of Practice
    are designed to help improve the quality and
    consistency of interpreting in health care. Just
    like clinical protocols for physicians, these new
    standards will provide guidance as to what is
    expected of health care interpreters and what
    constitutes good practice. There are 32 standards.

49
Principles of Community Engagement
  • Learn about the specific cultures present in the
    community as well as the needs and issues that
    impact them.
  • Engage cultural brokers as a way to introduce you
    to key community informants.
  • Be flexible with your agenda and expectations.
  • Ensure that partnerships are reciprocal.
  • Be present in the community.
  • Understand that relationships take time to be
    built and that just one negative event can
    destroy them.

50
  • Parts of this presentation has been adapted from
    the work of
  • R. McKenna Brown, PhD
  • Exec. Director, Office of International Education
  • Virginia Commonwealth University
  • In a presentation at Western State Hospital
  • February 11, 2009

51
For More Information
  • The Office of Cultural and Linguistic Competency
  • DMHMRSAS
  • http//www.dmhmrsas.virginia.gov/OHRDM-CLC.htm
  • To be on our email list of publications, research
    and items of interest- contact me at
  • cecily.rodriguez_at_co.dmhmrsas.virginia.gov
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