Horton, R. (2021). Beyond the Tip of the Iceberg: Five Stages Toward Cultural Georgetown University Web3Aspects of cultural competence 3.1Intercultural commmunication 3.2Acculturation 3.3Cultural sensitivity 3.4Cultural development 3.5Cultural adjustment and culture shock 3.6Acculturative stress in refugees 3.7Cultural and cross-cultural psychology 3.8Cognitive information processing theories 3.9Cultural metacognition 3.10Cultural intelligence 1232g et seq. how one is expected to respond to the examiner, regardless of gender, culture, age, and/or socioeconomic background; attitudes toward guessing, using the process of elimination, storytelling, or conversing with an unfamiliar individual; test abstraction (e.g., naming protocols that require providing already shared information or situations in which the individual is required to assume a make-believe attitude in order to engage in an expected manner); and. Such changes may require adjustments in clinical approaches. Audiologists and SLPs provide services to diverse populations. simultaneously appreciate cultural patterns and individual variation; engage in cultural self-scrutiny to assess cultural biases and improve self-awareness; utilize evidence-based practice to include client/patient/family characteristics, clinician expertise, and empirical evidence in clinical decisions; and. Science Research Associates. Stereotyping in dysphagia services could lead to recommendations based solely on the food preferences most often associated with the individuals cultural background. Response to intervention and the disproportionate representation of culturally and linguistically diverse students in special education. Cultural Competency can be referred to as a tool that can level the extremely imbalanced dynamic between a patient and a healthcare provider. Racism is when a specific group of people with similar race are marginalized and oppressed based on their racial culture. Crenshaw, K. (1989). Table 21, Cultural competence models - Improving Cultural WebWhat are the steps to cultural competence? self-assessment, including a review of the clinicians personal history, values, beliefs, and implicit and explicit biases; an understanding of how these factors might influence perceptions of communication abilities and patterns; an understanding of how personal perceptions might influence interactions and service delivery to a variety of individuals; and. Even when individuals share similar cultural backgrounds, their values are shaped by their own experiences and interpretations of these experiences. WebCultural competence is a dynamic and complex process requiring ongoing self-assessment, continuous cultural education, openness to others values and beliefs, and speech testing materials are language specific. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act also known as the Affordable Care Act (ACA)addresses the expansion of health care coverage to populations that may not have been served in the past, explicitly linking health literacy to patient protection and then offering funds/grants for programs to increase cultural responsiveness.