Title:
1Cultural Competency Healthcare Meeting the
Challenges of Diverse SocietiesTools for
Change
- Young Lee
- Director, HR/Training Development
- Coney Island Hospital
- New York City Health Hospitals Corporation
- Brooklyn, NY
- Email Young.Lee_at_nychhc.org
2Best Wishes!
3Webinar Presentation Goals
- Define cultural competence in context of
healthcare - Examine critical issues for developing cultural
competence in healthcare - Provide Tools for Change Developing cultural
excellence - Continuing cultural excellence Moving forward
4Cultural Competency Healthcare Meeting the
Challenges of Diverse Societies
5Cultural Diversity is a Fact
- The World has some 6,000 communities and as many
distinct languages. - Difference leads to diversity of vision, values,
beliefs, practice and expression. - Each culture deserves equal respect and dignity.
- -- Source United Nations, 2007
6Cultural Diversity is an Everyday Reality
- The international migration rate is growing
faster every year - We live in an increasingly heterogeneous society
- -- Source United Nations, 2007
7Reflecting the Respect of Fundamental Rights
- Culture is a set of distinctive spiritual,
material, intellectual and emotional features of
society or a social group - Respecting and safeguarding culture is a matter
of human rights - Cultural diversity presupposes respect of all
persons to participate in the cultural life of
one's choice - -- Source United Nations, 2007
8Cultural Diversity is our Collective Strength
- Rich diversity collective strength Quality
Healthcare - Cultural diversity is a natural fact that we need
simply recognize and respect - It is about plurality of knowledge, wisdom and
energy which all contribute to improving and
moving the World forward - -- Source United Nations, 2007
9Best Patients
- (If you) ask staff to describe patients or
families they like and do not like, they usually
like patients or families who are grateful or
people from the same culture or who speak the
same language, but beyond that the attributes of
popular patients (and) families become pretty
grim. The most popular patients never ring their
call lights, never ask for help, never ask
questions or challenge their nurses and doctors,
and never, ever read medical books or use the
internet for help. Their families are not
present, and they do not have any friends. In
fact, they are close to dead as possible. - -- Source Healthcare Quality Book, 2005
10Cultural Competency Healthcare Meeting the
Challenges of Diverse Societies
- 2. Critical Issues in
- Cultural Competency
11Why is Cultural Competence Gaining Importance?
- Meeting the needs on an increasingly diverse
society - Reducing health disparities and improving health
care quality - Tailoring health care delivery to meet population
and individual needs - Meeting federal requirements
- Increasing treatment compliance, patient safety
and reducing medical error - Supporting organizational business strategies and
objectives - Growing accreditation interest
- -- Dennis Andrulis, Drexel University, May, 2007
12Hospitals, Language and Culture A Snapshot of
the Nation
- Exploring Cultural and Linguistic Services in the
Nations Hospitals - A Report of Findings A
Report of findings from the Joint Commission - March 29, 2007
- http//www.jointcommission.org/NR/rdonlyres/E64E5E
89-5734-4D1D-BB4D-C4ACD4BF8BD3/0/hlc_paper.pdf - The Joint Commission, 2007
13Hospitals, Language and Culture A Snapshot of
the Nation
- Providing Culturally and Linguistically
Appropriate Care is Challenging - Six research areas studied
- Leadership
- Quality Improvement and Data use
- Workforce
- Patient Safety and Provision of Care
- Language Services
- Community Engagement
14Hospitals, Language and Culture A Snapshot of
the Nation
- Coordinate services relating to language and
culture as part of part of organization to
quality. - Create uniform data collection mechanism related
to providing quality care Ethnic, linguistic,
cultural - The Joint Commission, 2007
15Hospitals, Language and Culture A Snapshot of
the Nation
- Linguistically and culturally appropriate care
has direct impact on quality and safety, and is a
growing issue that is not going away. - -- Paul M. Schyve, M.D.,
- Senior Vice President, The Joint Commission
16Hospitals, Language and Culture A Snapshot of
the Nation
17Hospitals, Language and Culture A Snapshot of
the Nation
18Hospitals, Language and Culture A Snapshot of
the Nation
19Hospitals, Language and Culture A Snapshot of
the Nation
20Hospitals, Language and Culture A Snapshot of
the Nation
21Hospitals, Language and Culture A Snapshot of
the Nation
22Linguistic Competence
- Language/Interpretation services an important
part of total communication - Medically Trained Interpreters
- Clinical skills vs. Interpretation skills
- Telephonic translations, interpreter services,
literacy assistance - Cultural Liaisons M. Schlesinger
- Importance of varied approaches to meet diverse
needs.
23Model for Developing Cultural Competence
- Change agents public/private
- Organizational culture, structural/systemic
realities, everyday interaction with diversity - Education, Modeling, Secret Shopper/Systemic
Behaviors, Push-Pull factors - Internal/external controls and buy-in from key
stakeholders
24Increasing Cultural Competence in Healthcare
- Dearth of research and quantitative data
cultural diversity awareness research is in its
infancy. - Need for research, best practice database,
systemic maturity, patient-centered care, patient
safety, etc. - Measuring Staff competence to deal with cultural
diversity - Example The CMS H-CAHP Survey, in USA
25Commonwealth Fund
- Evidence to support that cultural and linguistic
competence would result in decreased system
costs, is not currently in the literature. - -- Source Commonwealth Fund, 2006
26Joint Commission Cultural Competence and
Communication
- Joint Commission, March, 2007
27Institute of Medicine (IOM)
- To Err is Human, IOM report 1999
- 48,000 to 98,000 preventable hospital patient
deaths per year caused by medical errors. - 2007 Updated data 100,000 preventable patient
deaths from Medication Errors alone. - Ineffective Communication Top cause of all
errors - -- Source Institute Of Medicine, 2007
282007 Joint Commission New Standards Crosswalk
on Cultural Competence
- Rights Responsibilities and Ethics
- Provision of Care, Treatment and Services
- Leadership
- Management of Human Resources
- Improving Organizational Performance
- Management of Information
- -- Source Joint Commission, 2007
29Joint Commission 2007 Do Not Use List
- cc
- IU
- qd
- QOD, q.o.d., qod, and QD, q.d., qd
- U
- MSO4, MgSO4, MS
- Abbreviations for Drug Names
- gt or lt
- Apothecary Units
- _at_
- Q6PM
- X3D
- No zero before decimal dose
- Zero after decimal dose
- µg
- -- Source Joint Commission, 2007
30Que?????? Health Literacy
- "Mr. Smith is 55 years old and was admitted for
LUQ pain, which was also associated with maybe EG
or CP. Possibly he may have ACS or LLL consolid
but the only thing against it is he has NVBS. We
did a CE profile which is negative, we may have
to do a ABDCT. Put him on ampnafgent to cover for
any GNB - -- Source Coney Island Hospital, 2006
31Cultural Competence Health Literacy
- Challenges that Broach Cultures
- Culture-Unique Health Literacy Challenges
Example LGBT and Unique needs of patient
populations - Healthcare Comfort within our own culture of
complexity Need to re-think our methods - Health literacy cultural competence
- Engaging the Community a Source of Information
and Linkage
32Health Literacy What Did The Doctor Say?
- The safety of patients cannot be assured without
mitigating the negative effects of low health
literacy and ineffective communication on patient
care. - Source What Did the Doctor Say? Improving
Health Literacy to Protect Patient Safety - Joint Commission 2007
332007 U.S. National Cultural Competence Standards
- U.S. National Cultural and Linguistically
Appropriate Services (CLAS) Standards - 14 Key Standards in providing quality care
- Standardized manner in which to Provide
Culturally Appropriate Healthcare Services - -- Source U.S. Department of HHS, 2005
34Cultural Competency Healthcare Meeting the
Challenges of Diverse Societies
35Coney Island Hospital NYC Health Hospitals
Corporation
- 11 acute-care hospitals, 100 different languages
spoken - 400K uninsured accessed care, 5 million
out-patient visits per year - TEMIS (U.N. Style translation system), on-site
interpreters, impact of 9/11 - -- Source NYC Health Hospitals Corporation,
2007
36Building Culturally Competent Organizations
- View from Coney Island Hospital
- How adults learn
- Literacy challenges
- How organizations learn
- Cultural challenges
- Teaching Healthcare Workers to be Culturally
Competent and Sensitive - Reinforcement Building a Culture of Safety
37Cultural Diversity and Sensitivity Training
Coney Island Hospital
- Organizations Patient Safety Focus
- Leadership Support and Exigence
- All Employees Systems
- Mandated In-Service Training
- New Employee Orientation Program
- Evidence of training effectiveness Patient
Satisfaction Rates, Error Reduction Rates - Department and Team Training
38Good ? Great
- Good to Great by Jim Collins and the Culture
of Excellence - Good is the enemy of Great?
- Is Cultural Competence enemy of Cultural
Excellence? - Are you On or Off the bus?
- -- Source Good to Great, Jim Collins, 2005
39Good to Great Jim Collins
- Get on the Bus with Culturally Competent/Excellent
Care for all Patients
40Cultural Competency Healthcare Meeting the
Challenges of Diverse Societies
41Conceptual Framework for Cultural Excellence
- Inter-connections in Cultural Excellence
-- Source Coney Island Hospital, 2007
42Tools for Change
- Cultural Excellence Assessment Profile Tool
- DiSC Behavior Profile Tool
- Secret Shopper Tool
- Patient Community Involvement Tool
43Tool 1
- Cultural Excellence
- Assessment Profile
- Tool for assessing organizational values
- Governance
- Planning Monitoring
- Communication
- Staff Development
- Infrastructure Service
- http//www.hrsa.gov/culturalcompetence/indicators/
default.htmcomponents - -- Source U.S. HHS HRSA, 2007
44Tool 2
- DiSC Profile
- Tool for assessing and highlighting individual
health worker behavior patterns - Learning from what we do
- Strengths Weaknesses
- Strategies for Behavior Change
- -- Source DiSC Profile Program, Carlson Company,
2004
45Tool 3
- Secret Shopper
- Proactive uncovering of risk areas
- Highlights organizational culture and challenges
- Identifies opportunities for systemic change and
tracking - Proactive involvement of cross-section of
organization - -- Source Peak Performance Consulting, 2003 and
Coney Island Hospital, 2007
46Tool 4
- Patient Community Involvement Initiative
- Partnership Programs Example Coney Island
Hospital Shorefront YM-YWHA, Partner Sue Fox - Interactive Learning Sessions Learning from
Stories - Celebration of Diversity and Learning
- Personalization of Challenges
- -- Source Coney Island Hospital, 2007
47Trends in Cultural Excellence
- Need for more research
- Need for measurable impact of cultural competency
interventions - Public health response to increasingly
diversifying patient base education advocacy - Changing competencies for healthcare workers and
organizations
48Cultural Competency Healthcare Meeting the
Challenges of Diverse Societies
49Cultural Excellence What is Needed Now
- Role of Advocacy
- Active Patient Involvement
- Developing hospital-based learning models
- Constant pursuit of Excellence in Healthcare
- Exchange of ideas for creation of Best Practice
Databases and Resource Banks for culturally
excellent healthcare delivery - Action Plan for Follow Up
50Developing Cultural Excellence
- Urgent need for research is Not a call for
Non-Action - No single magic bullet solution
- Cultural excellence developed through myriad
efforts of many key stakeholders - Enough data to launch innovative projects across
our borders - Important ingredients partnerships, humble
service, shared experiences, action based on
knowledge, rewarded accomplishments, teamwork,
managing change, patient involvement and common
ground
51Conclusions
- Recognize complexity and multifaceted-ness of
challenges - Launch collaborations and partnerships to build
new tools and conduct new research for cultural
excellence - Support non-parentalistic systems that
fundamentally involve patients in their own care - Resources and action must follow new knowledge
for developing cultural excellence - Be the Change
52