PROFESSIONAL educationABORIGINAL AustraliansPATIENT participationThis scoping review aims to explore how cultural safety is defined in the Australian literature with health professional learners in clinical interactions. It maps how the components of the Australian Health Practitioner Regula...
A critique of measures of emotion and empathy in First Peoples' cultural safety in nursing education: A systematic literature review Background:In Australia, undertaking cultural safety education often evokes strong emotional responses by health students. Despite the potential for emotio... K Mills,DK...
This chapter has an anthropological focus and looks at the evidence for culturally safe spiritual care in palliative care and suggests ways to advocate for non-discriminatory spiritual care education within palliative care. It introduces the concept of cultural safety and its link to the concept of ...
An additional impetus to engage in a cultural competence agenda is a desire to improve the equity and safety of the learning environment for all students. At the University, this entails a particular focus on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and cultures, and whose land our ...
physical symptoms physical symptoms are over-concerned about cleanliness of food, bedding, and dishes, extreme stress on health and safety; fear or physical contact with anyone in the new country; great concern over minor pains and skin eruptions; craving “home cooking”; 14、 use of alcohol ...
in lieu of using the term “culture.” While the lack of a standard, widely accepted definition does pose challenges for amassing a coherent body of research, an emphasis has been placed on clearly conceptualizing culture as used in each study, rather than on building consensus for one approac...
These topics include gender identity, sustainable lifestyles, and perceptions of safety and risk. For instance, the threat of climate change poses a significant challenge to the realization of a consumerist lifestyle, prompting citizens to modify their habits for personal well-being and environmental ...
The scale is a self-reported, brief instrument for any patient presenting with a traumatic injury, capable of quantifying resilience at any point in time, and may be predictive of outcomes and progress of healing. The developers of the scale conceptualized resilience into six categories (safety, ...
Cultural competence and cultural safety in nursing education: a framework for First Nations, Inuit and Métis nursing. Ottawa: ANAC; 2009. Google Scholar Kumagai A, Lypson M. Beyond cultural competence: critical consciousness, social justice, and multicultural education. Acad Med. 2009;84(6):...
in providing a single definition of cultural competence in healthcare have led to the introduction of many various terms used interchangeably in the literature. Notions such as cross-cultural competence, trans-cultural competence, cultural awareness, cultural sensitivity, cultural safety, cultural humility...