A postpartum client requested the placenta be sent home with the spouse. The nurse is upset and disgusted by the request and shares this view with the charge nurse. What action should the charge nurse take?
- A. Report the situation to the nurse manager or nursing supervisor.
- B. Report the nurse for violation of HIPAA.
- C. Report the conversation to the client and apologize for the lack of sensitivity of the nurse.
- D. Use this as a teachable moment on cultural sensitivity and health practices.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Increasing one's awareness of cultural sensitivity and health practices is the first step toward transcultural nursing. The charge nurse should use this event as a teachable moment. The nurse's reaction is not a violation of HIPAA. Reporting the conversation to the client does not serve a purpose.
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A nurse is providing care to a hospitalized client of Asian descent. What action should the nurse take to provide culturally competent care?
- A. Adhere to a personal knowledge base of Asian values and beliefs.
- B. Ask the client what values and beliefs are important to them.
- C. Provide care from an ethnocentric viewpoint.
- D. Expect that the client's health and illness beliefs are based on Asian traditions.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: To provide culturally competent care, the nurse must accept the client as a unique individual with their own values and beliefs. To adhere to a personal knowledge base of Asian values and beliefs would be generalization and could lead to stereotyping. Culturally competent care cannot be provided from an ethnocentric viewpoint, which would be based on the nurse's perspective and reflects a lack of experience and knowledge of cultures other than their own. Even though the client is Asian, the nurse should not expect that the client adheres to traditional Asian customs, but should see the client as an individual, providing care based on their individual beliefs and values.
The nurse is discussing a client's beliefs about health and illness and how it is treated. The client expresses the idea that illness and disease are based on a cause-and-effect philosophy of human body functions. The client's view matches which perspective?
- A. biomedical or scientific
- B. yin-yang theory
- C. magico-religious
- D. hot/cold theory
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: The biomedical or scientific view is generally shared by Western health care personnel and is based on cause-and-effect relationships. An example is the belief that bacterial or viral organisms cause meningitis. The natural or holistic view espouses that human beings are only one part of nature. Natural balance or harmony is essential for health. Examples of this perspective include hot/cold theory and yin-yang theory. According to the magico-religious perspective, supernatural forces dominate. Examples include faith healing in some Christian faiths and voodoo or witchcraft in some Caribbean cultures.
A nurse works in a health care setting that serves the Amish community. Members of this community look to the bishop who governs the community to make decisions about health care treatments. The nurse who provides extra time for a client from this community to select a treatment option and to discuss the situation with the community bishop is demonstrating which cultural concept?
- A. Ageism
- B. Stereotyping
- C. Generalization
- D. Ethnocentrism
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Generalization is using the knowledge of the trends within a specific group or community to guide the care of the client without stereotyping. However, the nurse must recognize that generalization can lead to oversimplification and stereotyping. Stereotyping has an end point; the assumption prevents one from seeing another person as unique. Generalization acknowledges common trends in a group while recognizing that more information is needed. Ageism is the stereotyping of older adult behavior or vulnerability based on an individual's prior experiences or anticipation of behaviors. Ethnocentrism is the belief that one's own ethnic heritage is the 'correct' one' and superior to others.
A client with the diagnosis of ovarian cancer confides practicing holistic medicine to the nurse. The client believes a cure exists through a macrobiotic diet, rather than what surgery or medical treatment can achieve. Which statement by the nurse is most appropriate?
- A. I would not bet my life on a diet treatment plan.'
- B. We can talk to your provider about adding this diet as a complementary therapy.'
- C. You should listen to your provider, who is the expert on this condition.'
- D. Alternative treatments do not have good outcomes for this type of cancer.'
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Nurses should support clients in their beliefs about health and illness. Complementary treatments are treatments used in conjunction with mainstream medicine. Clients should be provided the opportunity to incorporate health belief in practices into their plan of care.
The nurse walks into the client's room and finds a shaman 'fluffing the aura' of the client. What is the best action of the nurse?
- A. Leave the room and provide privacy to the client.
- B. Call the health care provider to report the findings.
- C. Ask the shaman to stop to allow the nurse to change IV tubing.
- D. Notify security of the activity in progress.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: By leaving the room and providing privacy the nurse supports the client in the quest to practice health practices within their culture and beliefs. Documentation of the activity is appropriate. Notifying the health care provider will not stop or support the belief. Notifying security and/or asking the shaman to leave may anger the client and violate the practice of a religious/cultural ritual.
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