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      Can Cultural Competency Reduce Racial And Ethnic Health Disparities? A Review And Conceptual Model

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      Medical care research and review : MCRR

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          Abstract

          This article develops a conceptual model of cultural competency’s potential to reduce racial and ethnic health disparities, using the cultural competency and disparities literature to lay the foundation for the model and inform assessments of its validity. The authors identify nine major cultural competency techniques: interpreter services, recruitment and retention policies, training, coordinating with traditional healers, use of community health workers, culturally competent health promotion, including family/community members, immersion into another culture, and administrative and organizational accommodations. The conceptual model shows how these techniques could theoretically improve the ability of health systems and their clinicians to deliver appropriate services to diverse populations, thereby improving outcomes and reducing disparities. The authors conclude that while there is substantial research evidence to suggest that cultural competency should in fact work, health systems have little evidence about which cultural competency techniques are effective and less evidence on when and how to implement them properly.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          9506850
          20809
          Med Care Res Rev
          Med Care Res Rev
          Medical care research and review : MCRR
          1077-5587
          1552-6801
          26 October 2016
          2000
          02 November 2016
          : 57
          : Suppl 1
          : 181-217
          Affiliations
          Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
          Article
          PMC5091811 PMC5091811 5091811 hhspa825245
          5091811
          11092163
          61bece69-1ad6-4315-b823-37ac1a7e20e1
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