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Culture, Professionalism and the Practice Of Pharmacy

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presented at FIP congress, Beijing 2007. Challenges pharmacy curricula to make provision for cultural competence. Includes notes,

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Presentation Transcript

  1. Slide 1: Culture, Professionalism and the Practice of Pharmacy Billy Futter Rhodes University South Africa
  2. Slide 2: Key questions 1. What is Culture? 2. How does Culture influence: • Practice of Pharmacy? • Professional status?
  3. Slide 3: 4. Cultural Competence Communication 3. Professionalism 2. Culture 1. Pharmacy Practice
  4. Slide 4: 1. Pharmacy Practice Emphasis on Product Emphasis on People
  5. Slide 5: People Need medicine
  6. Slide 6: People have Medicine-related problems
  7. Slide 7: Pharmaceutical care services Based on Relationship of trust
  8. Slide 8: But . . . People are different
  9. Slide 9: See & do things differently How many legs?
  10. Slide 10: Young lady? Old lady?
  11. Slide 11: Need to understand differences between people
  12. Slide 12: So . . .? • Important differences? • Impact on pharmacy practice? What is Culture?
  13. Slide 13: 2. Culture Society has many sub-groups Each has its own culture Society
  14. Slide 14: 2. Culture Society has many sub-groups Each has its own culture Society
  15. Slide 15: 2. Culture Society has many sub-groups Each has its own culture Generic? Generic? Generic? Generic? Society Generic? Generic? Generic? Generic?
  16. Slide 16: Different cultural groups group Generic group group group Society group group group group
  17. Slide 17: Society GEOGRAPHIC Chinese Generic Indian Japanese American Society Australian Swedish European African
  18. Slide 18: Society LANGUAGE Chinese Generic Hindi Russian English Society Italian Zulu French Xhosa
  19. Slide 19: Society RELIGION Muslim Generic Hindu Tao Christian Society Jew Mormon Ancestor Sects worship
  20. Slide 20: Society AGE and GENDER Female Generic Babies Male Kids Society Elderly Teenagers Mature Early adults Adults
  21. Slide 21: Society ECONOMIC Middle class Generic Upper class Lower class Super rich Society Destitute Rich Poor Middle
  22. Slide 22: Society SIZE and POWER Generic MAJORITY Minority Minority Minority Society Minority Minority Minority Minority
  23. Slide 23: people people Therefore people people Society people people people people 1. No generic cultural groups! 2. Each group has its own culture
  24. Slide 24: people people people people Society people people Group Culture people people Group Behaviour Routine, Predictable Difficult to change Prescribed limits
  25. Slide 25: people people people people Society people people people people Cultural boundaries “Right way of doing things” B.E.V.A.N.S.
  26. Slide 26: people people Different B.E.V.A.N.S people people Society people people people people Beliefs Expectations Values Assumptions & Attitudes Norms Symbols
  27. Slide 27: people people Different B.E.V.A.N.S people people Society people people people people Beliefs – what is right and wrong Expectations – what should happen Values – priorities, standards Assumptions & Attitudes – positive/ negative Norms – traditional way of doing things Symbols - group identity, convey meaning
  28. Slide 28: Cultural Symbols age, gender, language, race
  29. Slide 29: Status symbols Wheels!
  30. Slide 30: Other Status symbols
  31. Slide 31: Cultural symbols The Five Friendlies Beibei JingJing Huanhuan Yingying Nini Bei jing huan ying ni Fish Panda Olympic Antelope Swallow Welcome to flame Beijing sea forest fire earth sky
  32. Slide 32: people Influence of Culture on Behaviour people people people Society people people people people ‘BEVANS’ Routine Qualityo Beliefs f life Expectations Values Behaviour Outcomes Attitudes Norms Symbols Patterns Quality of service
  33. Slide 33: So: How does Culture influence 1. Health behaviour? * Patients? * Health professionals? 2. Health outcomes?
  34. Slide 34: Health Beliefs of different cultures Yin yang Yoga
  35. Slide 35: Tai Chi
  36. Slide 36: Gym
  37. Slide 37: Traditional Healers Rituals
  38. Slide 38: Expectations Queuing for health care
  39. Slide 39: Values pyramid Care Courage Respect, Fairness Competition, Equality, Informality
  40. Slide 40: Values pyramid Care Respect Fairness, Honesty Cooperation, Status, Formality
  41. Slide 41: Norms Right hand Greetings
  42. Slide 42: Responding to Visual cues
  43. Slide 43: Responding to Visual cues Oprah
  44. Slide 44: How do you respond to HIV/ AIDS Response to HIV/ AIDS? LOGO?
  45. Slide 45: ACTIVISTS?
  46. Slide 46: VICTIMS?
  47. Slide 47: Beliefs – Diagnosis? Cause of illness? Stress Evil spell Yin Yang imbalance Hereditary Lack of chi Environment Hot cold Imbalance Bad habits Punishment for sins Old age Microbe or Virus
  48. Slide 48: How do you respond to Symptoms? Visit Doctor or Pharmacist Get a prescription Self-medicate Vitamins Herbal treatments Rest and relax
  49. Slide 49: Response to Symptoms? Restore balance Avoid hot / cold Remove “spell” Visit Traditional healers Consult ancestors
  50. Slide 50: Conclusions Culture influences Signs and Symptoms – Interpretation different – Response different Communication different
  51. Slide 51: Consequences Professional advice Not sought Not trusted Not followed
  52. Slide 52: Serious? Health outcomes Cultural inequalities Unmet medicine needs Medicine related problems
  53. Slide 53: Serious? Access Quality of care Quality of life
  54. Slide 54: 3. Implications Professional Status of pharmacists?
  55. Slide 55: 3. Professional status Level of authority given by society to – make judgements – give directions
  56. Slide 56: Who decides? Society decides the roles it needs Social institutions give and limit authority to practice
  57. Slide 57: Criteria for Professional Status? Competent Committed to satisfy needs that are: Valued Complex Personal
  58. Slide 58: Perceptual haze Evidence? Competent Committed to satisfy needs that are: Valued Complex Personal
  59. Slide 59: Combining criteria Hi Commitment Lo Lo Hi Competence
  60. Slide 60: Combining criteria Combining criteria Hi Commitment Professional Lo Lo Hi Competence
  61. Slide 61: Combining criteria Combining criteria Hi Commitment Caregiver Professional Lo Lo Hi Competence
  62. Slide 62: Combining criteria Combining criteria Hi Commitment Caregiver Professional Lo Robot Lo Hi Competence
  63. Slide 63: Combining criteria Combining criteria Hi Commitment Caregiver Professional Lo Thief Robot Lo Hi Competence
  64. Slide 64: Combining criteria Combining criteria Hi Commitment Caregiver Professional Lo Thief Robot Lo Hi Competence
  65. Slide 65: Therefore Professional status can be increased Show evidence of Competence Commitment
  66. Slide 66: Therefore Professional status can be increased Show evidence of Competence – applied Commitment – service before self
  67. Slide 67: But: REAL WORLD - not laboratory group Generic group group group Society group group group group
  68. Slide 68: REAL WORLD IS CHANGING In the next 20 years . . . Global drift more people visiting foreign countries Urban rush 60 - 80% will live in town Population explosion additional 1.6 billion people on the planet
  69. Slide 69: REAL WORLD IS CHANGING
  70. Slide 70: REAL WORLD Communication Digital Revolution Mobiles Information on Web Web based marketing
  71. Slide 71: REAL WORLD IS CHANGING Professional tools
  72. Slide 72: Communication challenges Digital divide - less access Efficiency Pressure - Impatience Cultural filters - Misunderstanding Minorities - Intolerant
  73. Slide 73: Conclusion Cultural diversity increasing Communication challenges
  74. Slide 74: So . . . What can pharmacists do Agenda Competence, Commitment? Communication? Professional status?
  75. Slide 75: The Solution? Develop Cultural Competence!
  76. Slide 76: Cultural Competence Ability of health system to deliver consistent quality health care to patients in cross cultural situations irrespective of the culture of fellow professionals or patients.
  77. Slide 77: Cultural Challenge Lo Hi Incompetent Competent 1. Intolerant 5. Empathy 2. Impatient 6. Concerned 3. Dismissive 7. Caring 4. Judgemental 8. Respect
  78. Slide 78: Cultural ladder Cultural Proficiency Cultural Competence Cultural Pre-competence Cultural Blindness Cultural Incapacity Cultural Destructiveness
  79. Slide 79: Pre-competence to Competence COMPETENT Hi (Empathy, concerned, caring, respect) Desire Encounter Skill Knowledge Awareness INCOMPETENT Lo (intolerant, impatient, dismissive, judgemental)
  80. Slide 80: Everyone benefits! Patients - better QoC & QoL Health professionals - higher esteem Health system - more cost effective Medicine - improved use Employers - Legal protection - Satisfied staff - Loyal patrons
  81. Slide 81: And Pharmacists improve professional status! Hi Professional Commitment Lo Lo Hi Cultural Competence
  82. Slide 82: This is not the end but the beginning!
  83. Slide 83: Thank you