The Purnell Model for Cultural Competence is a broadly utilized model for teaching and studying intercultural competence, especially within the nursing profession. Employing a method of the model incorporates ideas about cultures, persons, healthcare and health professional into a distinct and extensive evaluation instrument used to establish and evaluate cultural competence in healthcare. Although the Purnell Model was originally created for nursing students, the model can be applied in learning/teaching, management, study and practice settings, within a range of nations and cultures.
History and description
editThe Purnell Model for Cultural Competence was developed by Larry D. Purnell and Betty J. Paulanka,[1] as an outline to classify and arrange elements that have an effect on the culture of an individual.[2] The framework uses an ethnographic method to encourage cultural awareness and appreciation[3] in relation to healthcare. It offers a basis for individual's providing care to gain knowledge around concepts and features that relate to various cultures[citation needed] in anticipation of assisting the performance of culturally competent care in clinical settings. The model has been recognised as a way to integrate transcultural proficiency into the execution of nursing[citation needed] and in “primary, secondary and tertiary”[4] environments.
Cultural competence has been described as a process, which is constantly occurring and through which one slowly advances[5] from lacking knowledge to developing it. An individual begins as unconsciously unskilled[6] due to their absence of personal knowledge that they are lacking awareness about other cultures. Next, an individual becomes aware of their incompetence due to their acknowledgement that they have insufficient comprehension of other cultures. Individuals then become deliberately competent (through learning about others’ cultures) so that they are able to apply personalised interventions. Finally, individuals gradually become oblivious to their competence[6] due to their ability to instinctively provide patients with culturally competent care.
In multicultural societies, it is becoming essential for healthcare professionals to be able to provide culturally competent care due to the results of enhanced personal health,[7] as well as the health of the overall population. The greater the overall knowledge a health practitioner has about cultures, the better their ability is to conduct evaluations and in turn provide culturally competent suggestions to patients. Purnell's model requires the caregiver to contemplate the distinct identities of each patient and their views towards their treatment[citation needed] and care.
The Purnell Model
editPurnell and Paulanka[1] proposed this model including four circles of varying sizes that are representative of the metaparadigms that are applied to nursing,[citation needed] as well as a twelve-part inner circle that illustrates the various “cultural domains”.[8]
Metaparadigm ideas (outer circles)
editThe outer circles of the model are interconnected metaparadigm ideas that relate to nursing, and are involved within the process of providing an individual with care.[9] The outermost (first) circle is used to represent the global society,[5] the second circle represents the concept of community, the third of family, and the innermost (fourth) circle illustrates the individual person.
Global society
editGlobal society relates to observing the world as an interconnected whole[10] that consists of a range of individuals from various cultural and ethnic backgrounds. Concepts that are present and influence this unified world include globalisation forces and the rapid growth of communication technologies that impact upon how the global society is maintained. It is critical to consider a person's place within the diverse world community[11] as influencing forces on the global society can impact not only the civilisation, but also an individual's world outlook.
Community
editCommunity is included in the model, as a metaparadigm, as in the provision of culturally competent care; an individual's situation within a community must be addressed. Through considering a patient's sense of community, care providers acknowledge that different communities may have divergent values, ethics and goals.[12]
Family
editAn individual's relationship with their family is essential to consider in the deliverance of care. This is because each individual may want to differently consider/explain who constitutes family, and additionally the degree to which they want family members to be involved in their care may fluctuate.[13]
Person
editPersons must be considered in the performance of culturally competent care, as each individual has their own sense of self,[14] values, beliefs and ideas. Due to every person having their own distinct way of relating to their environment, forming social relationships and communicating with others in their community[4] and broader society. Individual's beliefs and values may impact upon how they wish to be treated.
The domains (inner circle)
editThe twelve inner pieces of the model are cultural domains that are composed of concepts that should be focused upon when evaluating patients. Each of the twelve domains should not be viewed as separate or diverse entities, instead it should recognised that they can influence and inform each other[15] and hence should be viewed as unified parts of a whole.
Overview/heritage
editThis domain refers to concepts such as one's origin[5] that are vital in the aptitude of an individual in understanding both themselves and their patients.
Communication
editThis construct relates to the interactions an individual has been exposed to throughout their life and socialisation process, for example with family, peers and the wider community. It also conveys the importance of an individual's ability to provide verbal cues such as volume/tone[16] and non-verbal cues such as body language and eye contact.[17]
Family roles and organization
editThis domain refers to hierarchies and structures existent within families that may be dependent on gender or age,[18] which have the ability to influence not only family interactions but also the way in which an individual both communicates and acts.
Workforce issues
editWorkforce issues denotes the way in which aspects present within a workplace such as language barriers,[5] may have an effect on an individual and their sense of being and belonging.
Biocultural ecology
editThe concept of biocultural ecology relates to disparities that exist between the diverse range of racial and cultural groups[5] such as biological variations,[20] which need to be considered to gain a greater understanding and appreciation for other cultures.
High-risk behaviours
editHigh-risk behaviours like consumption of alcohol[16] are vital to consider as they exist within all cultures but the degrees to which they are used and subsequent impacts fluctuate.
Nutrition
editNutrition should be considered due to variations that exist between different cultures such as food intake and the values of certain foods.[21]
Pregnancy and childbearing
editThis concept is important for an individual to understand whilst providing culturally competent care due to the presence of diverse cultural beliefs about pregnancy.[22] There are also various practices and traditions that exist within ethnocultural groups[23] that need to be respected when providing care.
Death rituals
editThis domain is fundamental in the deliverance of culturally competent healthcare, as the care provider must recognise patients’ opinions towards death, and their customs towards occasions such as burial ceremonies.[5]
Spirituality
editSpirituality is essential to consider in the acquisition of knowledge about others’ cultures and their practices, for example an individual's views and habits of prayer.[24]
Health care practices
editThis domain should be considered in the provision of culturally competent care, as practices like organ transplantation[22] require the comprehension of an individual's situation and necessity for care as well as cultural considerations.
Health care practitioner
editThis concept should be considered when providing an individual with care due to there being varying opinions and views that are existent among cultures, for example in relation to health care providers.[21]
Centre of model
editThe black circle featured in the centre of the diagram remains vacant to symbolise that which is still unknown.[5]
Pointed line
editThe line that is present under the circular figure is representative of the progressions and lapses, which occur to cultural proficiency, that are dependent on situations and occurrences[20] that individuals are confronted with.
Objectives
editThe Purnell Model for Cultural Competence seeks to accomplish multiple goals towards achieving cultural competence. The model was initially created with the objective of offering a guide in which healthcare professionals could use to aid them in acquiring knowledge about different cultures' ideas and features. The model has been proposed as an approach to help explain situations and occurrences that have the ability to influence the way individual's view culture universally in regards to historical viewpoints.[25] It is also intended to offer a way for social and ethnic data to be examined, through an outline that is representative of human attributes. The model is proposed as a basis for healthcare practitioners to understand patient's interactions and connections in relation to their cultural setting. The overall goal the model was created to attain is to enable the individuals providing care to do so in a way which is thoughtful and skilled, as to encourage consistency as a result of being aware of interdependent cultural features.[25]
Applications
editPractice
editThe Purnell Model is intended for application in a range of settings/professions including: nursing, physiotherapy, sociology, social work, and in general medical practice.[4] Healthcare practitioners can employ the Purnell model in practice to aid in the provision of culturally competent care to patients.[26] The model can be applied to assist in the improvement and advancement of evaluation instruments, personalised healthcare plans and approaches to designing future strategies.[4] Purnell has noted himself, that the “Oncology Nurses Society” have utilised the framework to create their principles.[25]
Learning/teaching
editThe Purnell Model is implemented within nursing programs through the inclusion of cultural outlines and has also been utilised to aid in the gathering of facts and statistics.[4] It has additionally been observed that the framework is employed within undergraduate educational settings and to guide in teaching how to appropriately evaluate a patient's wellbeing.[27] The model is recognised within the coursework for a bachelor's degree in nursing as an outline that can be incorporated into numerous programs.[28]
Administration
editThe model has been implemented to assist with employee training in several countries.[29] Administrators in several multicultural workplaces apply the model to encourage and endorse both recognition and acceptance of all staff members, non-dependent on their cultural and ethnic backgrounds.[4] The concept of workforce issues from within the model can be applied in professional settings, to benefit workplace culture and to find a solution to any complications that arise.
Research
editMultiple individuals completing requirements for their studies (e.g., Masters and Doctorate) have applied the model in order to maintain an ethical approach to gathering information and conducting research.[4]
Strengths
editThe Purnell Model facilitates the potential to acquire information directly relevant to various cultures due to consideration given to each patient's circumstances.[30] Flexibility has been recognised as a critical quality of the model, as it is able to improve the prospective pertinence, of the model, to a range of settings like nursing.[31] The importance of the model is also acknowledged due to its ability to represent multiple outlooks on the world; that assist when providing individuals with culturally competent care.[32] The model has additionally been recognised to incorporate suppositions that are coherent in relation to the model's foundations, as well as containing well-defined explanations of the domains.[28]
Angela Cooper Brathwaite, who has conducted assessments on a variety of cultural competence models, has stated that the model is “comprehensive in content, very abstract, has logical congruence, conceptual clarity, demonstrates clinical utility and espouses the experiential-phenomenological perspective”.[32] The utilisation of a systems theory model is considered to be a beneficial quality of the framework, as well as the non-sequential scale provided to attain cultural competence.[33] Purnell's model is also perceived to have precision and coherence in reference to the clarity of the structure and its comprehensibility for intended users.[34]
Limitations/weaknesses
editThe Purnell Model does not account for the results that the provision of culturally competent care achieves/fails to achieve, in relation to the patient and their health.[35] This limitation results in a lack of authentication as to whether or not the model is successful in terms of the conduct of the care provider, and the consequences for patients.[35] The model's visual complexity can be seen as a limitation, as it may result in a lack of comprehension and diminish the model's function/value and its applicability.[28] As the framework is methodological,[36] it is considered to be quite abstract, which could detract from the model's utility in practice settings.[37] There is also a conceivable limitation in the instance that the model's material could be simplified beyond practical confines, so that the information provided/directed at an individual could mistakenly be used for an entire populace.[38] The intersecting concepts employed within the model can also be seen as a flaw, as only the minimum as to which is required to justify the concept should be used.[28]
Notes
edit- ^ a b Whitman 2006, p. 15.
- ^ Edwards 2007, p. 9.
- ^ Debiasi & Selleck 2017, p. 39.
- ^ a b c d e f g Tortumluoğlu 2006, p. 6.
- ^ a b c d e f g NASA 2013.
- ^ a b Whitman 2006, p. 49.
- ^ Suh 2004, p. 93.
- ^ Brathwaite 2005, p. 363.
- ^ Gurung 2014, p. 8.
- ^ Morrall 2009, p. 10.
- ^ Harper 2008, p. 19.
- ^ Hatzichristou, Lampropoulou & Lykitsakou 2008, p. 109.
- ^ Clay & Parsh 2016, p. 41.
- ^ Xu et al. 2006, p. 391.
- ^ Snider 2010, p. 8.
- ^ a b Whitman 2006, p. 51.
- ^ Axford 2015, p. 5.
- ^ Albougami 2016, p. 43.
- ^ Takayama 1999, p. 5.
- ^ a b Harper 2008, p. 15.
- ^ a b Axford 2015, p. 6.
- ^ a b Whitman 2006, p. 52.
- ^ Albougami 2016, p. 44.
- ^ Gurung 2014, p. 12.
- ^ a b c Purnell 2002, p. 196.
- ^ Albougami 2016, p. 47.
- ^ Lipson & Desantis 2007, p. 13S.
- ^ a b c d Harper 2008, p. 16.
- ^ Brathwaite 2003, p. 4.
- ^ Higginbottom et al. 2011, p. 8.
- ^ Albougami 2016, p. 48.
- ^ a b Brathwaite 2003, p. 7.
- ^ Harper 2008, p. 20.
- ^ Reid 2010, p. 8.
- ^ a b Shen 2014, p. 314.
- ^ Stewart & DeNisco 2018, p. 123.
- ^ Shen 2014, p. 315.
- ^ Snider 2010, p. 9.
References
edit- Albougami, Abdulrhman Saad (2016), The Relationship between Cultural Competence Levels and Perceptions of Patient-Centered Care among Filipino and Indian Expatriate Nurses working in the Saudi Arabian Healthcare Sector (PDF), pp. 1–50, ISBN 9781369633054
- Axford, Rita (2015). "Nursing Education and Practice: What Cultural Competency Can Teach Us" (PDF). Denver, Colorado: Regis University Loretto Heights School of Nursing. pp. 1–10. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
- Brathwaite, Angela Cooper (2003). "Selection of a Conceptual Model/Framework for Guiding Research Interventions". The Internet Journal of Advanced Nursing Practice. 6 (1): 38–49. ISSN 1523-6064.
- Brathwaite, Angela Cooper (2005). "Evaluation of a Cultural Competence Course". Journal of Transcultural Nursing. 16 (4): 361–369. doi:10.1177/1043659605278941. PMID 16160199.
- Clay, Aaron; Parsh, Bridget (2016). "Patient-and family-centered care: It's not just for pediatrics anymore". AMA Journal of Ethics. 18 (1): 40–44. doi:10.1001/journalofethics.2016.18.1.medu3-1601. ISSN 2376-6980. PMID 26854635.
- Debiasi, Laura; Selleck, Cynthia (2017). "CULTURAL COMPETENCE TRAINING FOR PRIMARY CARE NURSE PRACTITIONERS: AN INTERVENTION TO INCREASE CULTURALLY COMPETENT CARE". Journal of Cultural Diversity. 24 (2): 39–45. ISSN 1071-5568.
- Edwards, Tor (2007). "Cultural Competence Model: an Introduction" (PDF). pp. 1–16. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
- Gurung, Regan (2014). "Cultural Competence". Multicultural Approaches to Health and Wellness in America. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO, LLC. pp. 1–28. ISBN 9781440803499.
- Harper, Mary (2008), Evaluation of the antecedents of cultural competence, Ann Arbor, US, pp. 10–53, ISBN 9780549701651
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- Higginbottom, Gina; Richter, Magdalena; Mogale, Ramadimetja; Ortiz, Lucenia; Young, Susan; Mollel, Obianuju (2011). "Identification of nursing assessment models/tools validated in clinical practice for use with diverse ethno-cultural groups: an integrative review of the literature". BMC Nursing. 10 (1): 16. doi:10.1186/1472-6955-10-16. PMC 3175445. PMID 21812960.
- Lipson, Juliene; Desantis, Lydia (2007). "Current Approaches to Integrating Elements of Cultural Competence in Nursing Education". Journal of Transcultural Nursing. 18 (1): 10S–20S. doi:10.1177/1043659606295498. PMID 17204812.
- Morrall, Peter (2009). Sociology and Health: An Introduction. London: Routledge. pp. 1–14. ISBN 9780203881323.
- NASA (2013). "Purnell Model – National Association of School Nurses". National Association of School Nurses. Retrieved 2018-09-03.
- Purnell, Larry (2002). "The Purnell Model for Cultural Competence". Journal of Transcultural Nursing. 13 (3): 193–196. doi:10.1177/10459602013003006. ISSN 1043-6596. PMID 12113149.
- Reid, Jennifer (2010), "Impact of Cultural Competence Educational Learning Unit Intervention on First-semester Junior Bachelor of Science Nursing Students", Education Doctoral, Fisher Digital Publications: 1–10
- Shen, Zuwang (2014). "Cultural Competence Models and Cultural Competence Assessment Instruments in Nursing: A Literature Review". Journal of Transcultural Nursing. 26 (3): 308–321. doi:10.1177/1043659614524790. PMID 24817206.
- Snider, Melanie (2010), Culturally Appropriate Nursing Care of the Type 2 Diabetic Immigrant Population: Results of an Integrated Literature Review, University of Calgary: University of Victoria, pp. 122–132
- Stewart, Julie; DeNisco, Susan (2018). Role development for the nurse practitioner (2 ed.). Burlington, MA: Jones & Bartlett Learning. pp. 122–132. ISBN 9781284130133.
- Suh, Eunyoung Eunice (April 2004). "The Model of Cultural Competence Through an Evolutionary Concept Analysis". Journal of Transcultural Nursing. 15 (2): 93–102. doi:10.1177/1043659603262488. ISSN 1043-6596. PMID 15070491.
- Takayama, Masaomi (1999). "The role of the placenta in Japanese culture". Placenta. 20 (1): 5. doi:10.1016/S0143-4004(99)80002-2.
- Tortumluoğlu, Gülbu (2006). "The implications of transcultural nursing models in the provision of culturally competent care". ICUS and Nursing Web. 25: 1–11.
- Whitman, Marilyn (2006), An examination of cultural and linguistic competence in health care, Ann Arbor, US, pp. 1–66
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