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      Visitor or Inhabitant? Addressing the Needs of Undergraduate Transnational Medical Students

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      Journal of Studies in International Education
      SAGE Publications

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          A review of the acculturation experiences of international students

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            A prescription for cultural competence in medical education.

            Cultural competence programs have proliferated in U.S. medical schools in response to increasing national diversity, as well as mandates from accrediting bodies. Although such training programs share common goals of improving physician-patient communication and reducing health disparities, they often differ in their content, emphasis, setting, and duration. Moreover, training in cross-cultural medicine may be absent from students' clinical rotations, when it might be most relevant and memorable. In this article, the authors recommend a number of elements to strengthen cultural competency education in medical schools. This "prescription for cultural competence" is intended to promote an active and integrated approach to multicultural issues throughout medical school training.
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              Cultural competence: a conceptual framework for teaching and learning.

              The need to address cultural and ethnic diversity issues in medical education as a means to improve the quality of care for all has been widely emphasised. Cultural competence has been suggested as an instrument with which to deal with diversity issues. However, the implementation of culturally competent curricula appears to be difficult. We believe the development of curricula would profit from a framework that provides a practical translation of abstract educational objectives and that is related to competencies underlying the medical curriculum in general. This paper proposes such a framework. The framework illustrates the following cultural competencies: knowledge of epidemiology and the differential effects of treatment in various ethnic groups; awareness of how culture shapes individual behaviour and thinking; awareness of the social context in which specific ethnic groups live; awareness of one's own prejudices and tendency to stereotype; ability to transfer information in a way the patient can understand and to use external help (e.g. interpreters) when needed, and ability to adapt to new situations flexibly and creatively. The framework indicates important aspects in taking care of an ethnically diverse patient population. It shows that there are more dimensions to delivering high-quality care than merely the cultural. Most cultural competencies emphasise a specific aspect of a generic competency that is of extra importance when dealing with patients from different ethnic groups. We hope our framework contributes to the further development of cultural competency in medical curricula.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Studies in International Education
                Journal of Studies in International Education
                SAGE Publications
                1028-3153
                1552-7808
                February 03 2013
                February 02 2012
                : 17
                : 1
                : 79-96
                Article
                10.1177/1028315311431894
                ef437583-baba-4765-81bd-9f2d9a76d4f6
                © 2012

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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