Achieving Cultural Competency: A Case-Based Approach to Training Health Professionals provides the necessary tools to meet the ever-growing need for culturally competent practitioners and trainees. Twenty-five self-study cases cover a variety of medical topics, including cardiovascular, pulmonary, neurology, oncology, hematology, immunology, and pediatric disorders. Actual scenarios that occurred in clinical settings help the user gain direct insight into the realities of practice today. Cultural factors covered within the cases include cultural diversity plus gender, language, folk beliefs, socioeconomic status, religion, and sexual orientation.
This book is an approved CME-certifying activity to meet physicians' cultural competency state requirements.
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Höhe: 216 mm
Breite: 140 mm
Dicke: 17 mm
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978-1-4051-8072-6 (9781405180726)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Horace DeLisser, MD: After receiving his medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania in 1985, he remained at the University to complete his internal medicine residency and pulmonary medicine fellowship, as well as post-doctoral research training. He is currently a pulmonary and critical care specialist and an Associate Professor of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, School of Medicine. Scientifically, Dr. DeLisser has a program of independently funded research that is focused on the cells that line blood vessels (endothelial cells) and their activity during inflammation and the formation of new vessels. Dr. DeLisser has been also been very active in medical education with a particular interest in cultural competency. He is a course director of the first year medical student course, "Culture and Communication" and is the Co- investigator for the NIH, NHLBI funded grant "Cultural Competence Health Disparities Training Program". He precepts and teaches in several of the medical school's courses on humanism and professional. Additionally, Dr. DeLisser helped to develop the course, Spirituality in Medicine. In recognition of his contributions to medical education, he earned the Leonard Berwick Memorial Teaching Award, a First Year Medical School, Class, Outstanding Teacher Award, a Penn Pearls Teaching Award and the 2005 Robert L. Mayock - Alfred P. Fishman Teaching Award.
Lisa Hark, PhD, RD is a renowned family nutrition expert with over 20 years of experience in nutrition counseling and promoting the benefits of healthy eating in children and adults. As Director of the Nutrition Education and Prevention Program at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in Philadelphia for the past 18 years, she is a leading nutrition educator of medical students and doctors. She is currently Project Director for the Cultural Competence Health Disparities Training Program", a five-year grant funded by the NIH, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Recently, she was the host for season one of the new television series "Honey, We're Killing the Kids", which airs on TLC. Dr. Hark is the editor-in-chief of numerous books including Medical Nutrition and Disease: A Case-Based Approach (Blackwell Publishing), which is now in its 3rd edition and used in many medical schools, physician assistant, nursing and dietetic programs in the US and around the world. In 2004, she edited Cardiovascular Nutrition: Disease Management and Prevention (American Dietetic Association). In 2005 and 2006 she co-authored Nutrition For Life and The Whole Grain Miracle Diet (DK Publishing). Her current book, The Complete Guide to Nutrition in Primary Care, (Blackwell Publishing), will be released in 2007 and is aimed at primary care clinicians, nurses, physician assistants, and nutritionists.
Preface.
Foreword.
Introduction.
Tools to Assess Cultural Competency Training (TACCT).
Cases.
1 "The Case of Ruth Franklin: A 40-year-old African-American woman with heart failure".
2 "The Case of Carl Jones: A 48-year-old homeless Caucasian man with chest pain and lung cancer".
3 "The Case of Maria Morales: A 57-year-old Mexican woman with type 2 diabetes".
4 "The Case of Maya Mohammad: A 16-year-old Arab-American teenager with leukemia".
5 "The Case of Jon Le: A 48-year-old Korean man with cerebral hemorrhage".
6 "The Case of Nadia Rosenberg: A 45-year-old Russian woman with drug resistant tuberculosis".
7 "The Case of Isabel Delgado: A 47-year-old Dominican Republic woman with hypertension".
8 "The Case of George Dennis: A 35-year-old African-American man with a cough".
9 "The Case of Mary Jones: A 2-year-old Caucasian girl with delayed speech development".
10 "The Case of Priya Krishnamurthy: A 73-year-old Asian Indian woman with a stroke".
11 "The Case of Carlos Cruz: A 34-year-old Mexican man with sleep apnea and metabolic syndrome".
12 "The Case of Denise Smith: A 41-year-old Caucasian woman with asthma".
13 "The Case of Mae Ling Chung: A 22-year-old Chinese woman with an arranged marriage".
14 "The Case of Earl Collins: A 73-year-old African-American man with lung cancer".
15 "The Case of Irma Matos: A 66-year-old Ecuadorian woman with type 2 diabetes and hypertension".
16 "The Case of Eileen Clark: A 82-year-old African-American woman with a stroke".
17 "The Case of Leslie O'Malley: A 66-year-old Irish-American man with breast cancer".
18 "The Case of Juana Caban: A 21-year-old Puerto Rican woman who is pregnant and HIV+".
19 "The Case of Alice Gregory: A 71-year-old African-American woman with aortic stenosis".
20 "The Case of Sunil Guha: A 32-year-old Asian Indian man with metabolic syndrome".
21 "The Case of Pepper Hawthorne: A 19-year-old Caucasian woman with a stroke".
22 "The Case of Alika Nkuutu: A 24-year-old African woman with sickle cell disease".
23 "The Case of Miguel Cortes: A 9-year-old Mexican boy with asthma".
24 "The Case of Naomi Fulton: A 49-year-old African-American woman with metabolic syndrome".
25 "The Case of Bobby Napier: A 68-year-old rural Appalachian man with type 2 diabetes".
Appendix 1: Positioning The Interpreter.
Appendix 2: Kleinman's Explanatory Model of Illness.
Review Questions.
Index