Culture, Ethnicity, and Religion
Understanding Culture
Culture, Health, and Illness
Cultural and Refugee Assessment
Spirituality and Holistic Nursing Care
100

This concept includes the shared beliefs, values, customs, communication patterns, and behaviors learned by members of a social group.

Culture

100

Culture is acquired through interaction with family members, communities, and social institutions. This reflects the characteristic that culture is this.

Learned

100

A client believes depression is caused by a spiritual imbalance rather than a medical condition. Culture is influencing the client’s understanding of this.

Cause or meaning of illness

100

The nurse asks, “What language do you prefer when discussing your care?” This assesses which cultural component?

Communication and language preference

100

A client states that prayer provides comfort during periods of anxiety. The nurse should recognize prayer as this type of resource.

Spiritual coping resource

200

This term refers to a person’s identification with a group that shares ancestry, history, language, traditions, or geographic origin.

Ethnicity

200

Language, traditions, beliefs, and behaviors are transmitted from parents and communities to younger members. This means culture is this.

Shared and passed from generation to generation

200

A client first consults a traditional healer before seeking psychiatric care. Culture is influencing this behavior.

Help-seeking or treatment-seeking behavior

200

The nurse asks who should be involved in health care decisions and who holds authority within the household. This assesses which component?

Family roles and social organization

200

A hospitalized client requests time and privacy for a religious ritual. Which nursing action is most appropriate?

Make reasonable arrangements for the practice when it does not interfere with safety or essential treatment

300

This organized system of beliefs, rituals, practices, and moral principles may provide meaning, hope, and connection with a higher power.

Religion

300

A family maintains traditional health practices while also using modern medical services. This demonstrates that culture is capable of doing this.

Changing or adapting over time

300

A client reports emotional distress primarily through headaches, fatigue, and stomach discomfort. Culture may be influencing this aspect of illness.

Expression or presentation of symptoms

300

Communication, personal space, social organization, time orientation, environmental control, and biological variations are examples of these.

Six components of a cultural assessment

300

The nurse is unfamiliar with a client’s religious dietary restriction. What is the nurse’s best initial response?

Ask the client to explain the restriction and how the health care team can support it

400

A client identifies with an ethnic group but does not follow the religious practices commonly associated with that group. The nurse should make this assessment.

Assess the client's individual beliefs rather than make assumptions based on group membership

400

A client’s culture influences communication, family roles, food choices, emotional expression, and responses to illness. This demonstrates that culture affects this broad area.

Many aspects of a person's life and behavior

400

A client avoids eye contact with the nurse as a sign of respect. Which nursing response is most appropriate?

Recognize that eye contact has different meanings across cultures and avoid labeling the behavior as evasive

400

When assessing a client who is a refugee, the nurse should ask about migration history, traumatic experiences, current support systems, and this fourth topic.

Current health needs and assess to basic resources

400

A client refuses a treatment because of a spiritual belief. Which nursing action should occur first?

Assess the client's understanding, beliefs, concerns, and decision-making capacity without judgment

500

A nurse says, “People from this culture usually do not discuss emotional problems.” This statement demonstrates this barrier to individualized care.

Stereotyping

500

Culture is learned, shared, adaptive, dynamic, integrated, symbolic, and transmitted across generations. These are collectively known as what?

Seven characteristics of culture

500

A nurse assumes that a quiet client is depressed without first considering the client’s cultural communication style. This error can result in this clinical consequence.

An inaccurate assessment or inappropriate diagnosis

500

A refugee client becomes visibly distressed when asked about past violence. Which nursing action is most appropriate?

Pause the interview, acknowledge the distress, promote safety, and allow the client to decide whether to continue

500

A culturally responsive plan for a client with depression includes the client’s preferred language, family involvement, spiritual practices, culturally acceptable coping methods, and prescribed treatment. This approach demonstrates what?

Integrating cultural factors into a holistic, individualized plan of therapeutic care

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