TY - JOUR
T1 - Transcultural care and individuals with an intellectual disability
AU - Crotty, Gerard
AU - Doody, Owen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© SAGE Publications.
PY - 2016/12/1
Y1 - 2016/12/1
N2 - Healthcare delivery today reflects a history of change, which has responded to lifestyle changes, cultural diversity, population needs and expectations. In today's health-care environment it is crucial for health-care professionals to be mindful of cultural factors that affect health. These factors include the intricate interdependent biological, intellectual, psychological, social and spiritual needs of the individuals they work with. However, challenges exists for those who provide healthcare to people with intellectual disability. This article presents the transcultural care challenges for people with intellectual disability, through highlighting the biomedical/sociocultural perspectives of healthcare, communication and inequality experienced by those with intellectual disability. As a population group, people with intellectual disability can often be considered part of a larger culture rather than a culture within itself, and this article endeavours to emphasize that intellectual disability is in itself a coterminous culture. By highlighting intellectual disability as a cultural community within a larger community, requiring a transcultural response to care on several levels health-care professionals can provide culturally compatible care to those with intellectual disability within a transcultural framework to augment a person-centred approach to care.
AB - Healthcare delivery today reflects a history of change, which has responded to lifestyle changes, cultural diversity, population needs and expectations. In today's health-care environment it is crucial for health-care professionals to be mindful of cultural factors that affect health. These factors include the intricate interdependent biological, intellectual, psychological, social and spiritual needs of the individuals they work with. However, challenges exists for those who provide healthcare to people with intellectual disability. This article presents the transcultural care challenges for people with intellectual disability, through highlighting the biomedical/sociocultural perspectives of healthcare, communication and inequality experienced by those with intellectual disability. As a population group, people with intellectual disability can often be considered part of a larger culture rather than a culture within itself, and this article endeavours to emphasize that intellectual disability is in itself a coterminous culture. By highlighting intellectual disability as a cultural community within a larger community, requiring a transcultural response to care on several levels health-care professionals can provide culturally compatible care to those with intellectual disability within a transcultural framework to augment a person-centred approach to care.
KW - communication
KW - cultural models
KW - inequity
KW - intellectual disability
KW - transcultural care
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85006380791&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/1744629515621466
DO - 10.1177/1744629515621466
M3 - Article
C2 - 26669608
AN - SCOPUS:85006380791
SN - 1744-6295
VL - 20
SP - 386
EP - 396
JO - Journal of Intellectual Disabilities
JF - Journal of Intellectual Disabilities
IS - 4
ER -