Editorial

Cultural competence or speaking the patient’s language?

Vanessa Burch

Abstract


Cultural competence has become yet another buzz word in the education of healthcare professionals. According to Prasad et al., ‘culturally competent care assumes that healthcare providers can learn a quantifiable set of attitudes and communication skills that will allow them to work effectively within the cultural context of the patients they come across’. The questions that arise, therefore, are whether clinical trainees are being fully supported to acquire this fundamental skill and whether overloaded curricula can accommodate the ongoing demand for more ‘teaching time’. 


Author's affiliations

Vanessa Burch, Department of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, South Africa

Full Text

PDF (56KB)

Keywords

Cultural competence

Cite this article

African Journal of Health Professions Education 2016;8(1):3. DOI:10.7196/AJHPE.2016.v8i1.802

Article History

Date submitted: 2016-04-28
Date published: 2016-04-28

Article Views

Abstract views: 7292
Full text views: 3089

Comments on this article

*Read our policy for posting comments here