TY - JOUR
T1 - Clinician/Patient Connections in Ethnoculturally Nonconcordant Encounters With Political-Asylum Seekers
T2 - A Comparison of Physicians and Nurses
AU - Koehn, Peter H.
AU - Sainola-Rodriguez, Kirsti
PY - 2005/10
Y1 - 2005/10
N2 - The article compares the ability of nurses and physicians to connect with patients in ethnoculturally nonconcordant clinical encounters with 41 randomly selected political-asylum seekers (PAS) residing at five Finnish reception centers in summer 2002. Doctors and nurses were equally unlikely to draw congruent assessments of the patient's past and present health condition, mixed use of biomedical/ethnocultural practices, adherence with medication and eat/drink instructions, (dis)satisfaction, and future confidence in recommended biomedical and ethnocultural approaches. Nurses were considerably more likely to hold views that were congruent with the patient's reported health care effectiveness in Finland. The findings suggest that doctors should request and place special weight on the insights of the principal attending nurse when assessing the potential contributions of personal, family, and host-society health care assets and inhibitors to a migrant patient's overall health plan. The results also suggest that culturally sensitive health care training offers specific advantages to nurses who attend to PAS.
AB - The article compares the ability of nurses and physicians to connect with patients in ethnoculturally nonconcordant clinical encounters with 41 randomly selected political-asylum seekers (PAS) residing at five Finnish reception centers in summer 2002. Doctors and nurses were equally unlikely to draw congruent assessments of the patient's past and present health condition, mixed use of biomedical/ethnocultural practices, adherence with medication and eat/drink instructions, (dis)satisfaction, and future confidence in recommended biomedical and ethnocultural approaches. Nurses were considerably more likely to hold views that were congruent with the patient's reported health care effectiveness in Finland. The findings suggest that doctors should request and place special weight on the insights of the principal attending nurse when assessing the potential contributions of personal, family, and host-society health care assets and inhibitors to a migrant patient's overall health plan. The results also suggest that culturally sensitive health care training offers specific advantages to nurses who attend to PAS.
KW - clinician/patient connections
KW - ethnoculturally discordant encounters
KW - political-asylum seekers
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/26444489695
U2 - 10.1177/1043659605278936
DO - 10.1177/1043659605278936
M3 - Article
C2 - 16160192
AN - SCOPUS:26444489695
SN - 1043-6596
VL - 16
SP - 298
EP - 311
JO - Journal of Transcultural Nursing
JF - Journal of Transcultural Nursing
IS - 4
ER -