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≫ Read Gratis Caring for Patients from Different Cultures (Audible Audio Edition) GeriAnn Galanti Colleen Patrick University Press Audiobooks Books

Caring for Patients from Different Cultures (Audible Audio Edition) GeriAnn Galanti Colleen Patrick University Press Audiobooks Books



Download As PDF : Caring for Patients from Different Cultures (Audible Audio Edition) GeriAnn Galanti Colleen Patrick University Press Audiobooks Books

Download PDF  Caring for Patients from Different Cultures (Audible Audio Edition) GeriAnn Galanti Colleen Patrick University Press Audiobooks Books

Healthcare providers in the American medical system may find that patients from different cultures bring unfamiliar expectations, anxieties, and needs into the examination room. To provide optimal care for all patients, it is important to see differences from the patient's perspective and to work with patients from a range of demographics. Caring for Patients from Different Cultures has been a vital resource for nurses and physicians for more than twenty years, offering hundreds of case studies that illustrate cross-cultural conflicts or misunderstandings as well as examples of culturally competent health care.

Now in its fifth edition, Caring for Patients from Different Cultures covers a wide range of topics, including birth, end of life, communication, traditional medicine, mental health, pain, religion, and multicultural staff challenges. This edition includes more than sixty new cases, introduces a new chapter on improving adherence, and updates the concluding chapter with examples of changes various hospitals have made to accommodate cultural differences. Grounded in concepts from the fields of cultural diversity and medical anthropology, Caring for Patients from Different Cultures provides healthcare workers with a frame of reference for understanding cultural differences and sound alternatives for providing the best possible care to multicultural communities.


Caring for Patients from Different Cultures (Audible Audio Edition) GeriAnn Galanti Colleen Patrick University Press Audiobooks Books

This book was filled with so many interesting anecdotes it almost read like a novel. I'm heading for a career in medical social work, and this book fulfilled my craving for knowledge on the topics of both sociology and medicine. It's written in an extremely simple style (not very prosaic), but it's not dry. I'm giving it to my future mother-in-law to use as part of her curriculum as a nursing instructor. It's probably the most valuable for nurses, as they are the main players, alongside patients and their families, in the anecdotes, but it will also be helpful to doctors and social workers. Galanti raises awareness about culturally oriented topics and events that could be unforeseen by hospital workers, who may find themselves angry or bewildered in situations where neither side understands the other due to cultural differences neither of them recognizes.

One of my favorite anecdotes told of a patient who, to the consternation of his roommate, was leaving footprints on the toilet seat and water all over the bathroom. This seemed very strange to the nurses, until they found out that the patient came from a country where squat toilets and washing (rather than toilet paper) were the norm and he had no experience with American-style bathroom practices.

Galanti also gives advice on dealing with these culture clashes, focusing on accommodating the patients and their families, since hospital stays/procedures can be difficult and stressful. She illustrates right and wrong ways of dealing with these situations by talking about how the professional acted and whether it was effective or potentially damaging, and going over what they could have done differently.

Overall, I'd highly recommend it as a textbook or an entertaining read for anyone in a medical profession, or for anyone entering social work or sociology, or even a layperson who's interested in any of the above.

Product details

  • Audible Audiobook
  • Listening Length 13 hours and 2 minutes
  • Program Type Audiobook
  • Version Unabridged
  • Publisher University Press Audiobooks
  • Audible.com Release Date March 25, 2015
  • Language English, English
  • ASIN B00V6QCPGO

Read  Caring for Patients from Different Cultures (Audible Audio Edition) GeriAnn Galanti Colleen Patrick University Press Audiobooks Books

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Caring for Patients from Different Cultures (Audible Audio Edition) GeriAnn Galanti Colleen Patrick University Press Audiobooks Books Reviews


Got the product on time. It's a very entertaining book with all the stories in it. It's racist AF but funny. She generalizes but doesn't stereotype. If you read this then you will understand the difference.
Got me through the class with an A+. I cant complain.
Caring for Patients from Different Cultures, 4th Edition by Geri-Ann Galanti is a good book and I intend to adopt it for my Behavioral Science course at Destiny University School of Medicine as a conversation starter in the area of Cultural Relevence. My students tend to be of many faiths and many countries. I think the way the book is divided into ideas of Time Orientation, Communication, the experience of pain, differences in how men and women expect to be treated, birth issues, mental health issues, and the caveat of asking about the patient's beliefs are super important for students and providers to understand. While reading this book I asked an Indian Dentist about some of his cultural run ins and he talked a lot about how people weigh the cost benefits of dentures versus implants not by quality of life but by time expected to live and how he had experienced these issues. I talked to numerous other non-white non mainstream cultured providers and none were insulted or put off by the stories the author told but often found them humorous and used them as a stimulus to remember stories from their own backgrounds and training.

The truth is that people have many theories of illness, disease, purpose of health care, and values about the cost and kind of health care that they receive. The author's point of view is that it costs little for the provider to show respect for the family and cultural values of the patient and often harms many if the provider does not. I agree to a certain extent. However, I draw the line for myself where ignorance is so powerful that it calls for the sacrifice of a human to fulfill the agenda of power icon for a family, a religion, or a culture. She uses the example of a young person being allowed to die because the family was afraid an evil spirit might enter her body through an incision as an example of cultural competence respecting the injunction that the family makes the decision and the powerful in the family hold what is best for the family. In this case, I would maintain that a physician who did not fight this tooth and claw with all the resources of the legal department, judges, children's services, and religious resources failed the child and acted negligently, not with cultural competence. The author seems to say that such acts are "causing unnecessary trouble." The author holds that it is impossible to know if evil spirits could or could not enter the child and therefore respecting the family's beliefs are warranted. I find this magical thinking. As a scientist I know that an evil spirit will not enter the incision of my patient, but that germs, bacteria and virus may, so I would keep a clean sterile surgical field and use antibiotics; something that the author would say is as much a ritualistic practice as equivalent with family's ritualistic beliefs in the evil spirits. And so this food for thought stimulates excellent opportunites for discussion.

These issues definitely evoke great emotion and need to be discussed to help people to bring insight to their practices. I expect that using this book will be helpful to my students for the purpose of enhancing their education in the behavioral sciences.
This book is great! It provides a lot of detail and examples. It has more information than I need as a CNA and Allied Health instructor. But, I was able to pull some sample scenarios to use in class!
Anybody getting higher degrees in nursing should get this book as a guide. It's more of a bare-bones culture and care guide. Needless to say as all of these different ethnicities incorporate into the fabric of America their cultures will become less profound than ours. I had Muslim/Islamic patients which were no different than ours simply because they become Americanized; however, the dietary no pork remained intact. Many Americanized women won't even cover their heads with a scarf. Now if you get like a Syrian refugee as a patient--they just come here yes you can expect their culture to be much more profoundly apparent. In a few years--especially the younger generation you can expect them to become Americanized.
I was required to purchase this book for a cross cultural medicine course. The professor had not read the book before we started the course and I hope that if he had this book would not have been used. I felt that it was written in a way that insulted my intelligence. The examples were super cheesy and she wrote them as if she had truly had each of these experiences. However, she was about as convincing as your mom telling you that the tooth fairy is real when you're 16. I was thoroughly offended by some of the author's writings, particularly in regards to African Americans. Although this is a book that is supposed to enlighten readers about other cultures, all it really accomplished was reinforcing false stereotypes. I truly can't believe someone published this.
This book was filled with so many interesting anecdotes it almost read like a novel. I'm heading for a career in medical social work, and this book fulfilled my craving for knowledge on the topics of both sociology and medicine. It's written in an extremely simple style (not very prosaic), but it's not dry. I'm giving it to my future mother-in-law to use as part of her curriculum as a nursing instructor. It's probably the most valuable for nurses, as they are the main players, alongside patients and their families, in the anecdotes, but it will also be helpful to doctors and social workers. Galanti raises awareness about culturally oriented topics and events that could be unforeseen by hospital workers, who may find themselves angry or bewildered in situations where neither side understands the other due to cultural differences neither of them recognizes.

One of my favorite anecdotes told of a patient who, to the consternation of his roommate, was leaving footprints on the toilet seat and water all over the bathroom. This seemed very strange to the nurses, until they found out that the patient came from a country where squat toilets and washing (rather than toilet paper) were the norm and he had no experience with American-style bathroom practices.

Galanti also gives advice on dealing with these culture clashes, focusing on accommodating the patients and their families, since hospital stays/procedures can be difficult and stressful. She illustrates right and wrong ways of dealing with these situations by talking about how the professional acted and whether it was effective or potentially damaging, and going over what they could have done differently.

Overall, I'd highly recommend it as a textbook or an entertaining read for anyone in a medical profession, or for anyone entering social work or sociology, or even a layperson who's interested in any of the above.
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