Intercultural Communication between Long-Stay Immigrants and Catalan Primary Care Nurses: A Qualitative Approach to Rebalancing Power
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Intercultural Competence in Healthcare
1.2. Immigrant Acculturation
1.3. Research Gap
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Study Setting
2.3. Ethical Considerations
2.4. Participants and Sampling
2.5. Data Collection
2.6. Data Analysis
2.7. Rigor
3. Results
3.1. Downplaying the Importance of Culture
“Culture has nothing to do with good work and care.”(P5 I)
“They are not interested in the culture of women from Morocco or South America. What they focus on is your health and how to help you. Except for Ramadan, when they ask things they need to know.”(P2 I)
“You trust more classic pharmacopoeia over natural remedies. You consider that other stuff witchcraft, shamanism. A Latino person tends to rely more on natural remedies.”(P6 FG-P4 I)
“Latina women are modest about some things. We want female nurses, not male nurses (...) You have to know who you’re dealing with, be tactful, and ask.”(P2 I)
“The nurse says I have a problem: high blood pressure. But I do not think I have that problem, and I tell her I do not want to take meds. Then, she knows I am not taking them, she has marked that in the record (...) And I continue going to the follow-up visits.”(P2 FG)
3.2. Communication with More Humanity and Respect
“When you see a nurse taking care of you with genuine interest, you like it. Then, you leave the visit with a good impression.”(P2 FG)
“The nurse was very supportive to me and my son; she was really sensitive. That is greatly appreciated when a child has anxiety issues (…). Sometimes you need a hug, and when a nurse says a kind word, it’s like a hug, some support in the midst of the fear.”(P6 FG-P4 I)
“An essential skill for interacting with people is a sensitive attitude: having a bit of empathy and knowing how to give emotional support.”(P4 GF)
“Smiling and being nice doesn’t cost a thing.”(P7 GF)
3.3. Communication as a Tool
“I talk a lot and ask many questions; I am very persistent (...). And I want to know about my problem, what is going on in my body, why I am like this, and how am I going to get better.”(P6FG-P4 I)
“I want to speak freely to be able to describe my problem in detail. And always be able to ask.”(P1 I)
“When we explain our problems to the nurse, she only focuses on the problem. She prints out a sheet of paper and gives it to us. But she should ask people what is wrong, how they feel and how they want to be treated.”(P7 FG)
“Ask patients about their needs, how they want to solve the issue, and then you can come to a common agreement. Communication is a very good bridge.”(P3 FG)
“Nurses don’t have time to listen because they’re completely focused on doing their thing, you know? Then, there won’t be any communication (...). I want the nurse to listen to me, to take time to care for me and let me to explain how I feel.”(P6 FG-P4 I)
3.4. Power Imbalance in Communication
“They shouldn’t take their position to heart. Because it’s often: 'I’m here to work.' And I feel this power and authority. And you, there, don’t matter to them. But if they stop that way of thinking and act in a more sensitive way, the patient is going to be very happy with that person.”(P2 GF)
“Sometimes they treat you badly. At first, you try to make excuses for her (...). But then you start thinking she treats you like that because you are a spic and she doesn’t like you (...). I feel powerless; I feel angry, but I swallow my anger.”(P4 I- P6 FG)
“If you are a foreigner, then you enter through one door and go straight out another.”(P1 GF)
“I didn’t speak the language and didn’t understand a thing (…) The nurses said, ‘Go away, leave, this is not the place to give birth!’ And I wanted to have the child; I was in labor (…). But in the end, they took me in. Like crap: ‘Wash up! (…)’. African women give birth in a tree.”(P4 FG)
“I didn’t like her arguing with me so I didn’t come back again. I have another nurse now, but I still keep away.”(P7 FG)
3.5. Defending the Nurses and Avoiding Conflict
“Maybe that lady was feeling bad, had family problems, or something else (...). And I arrived at the wrong time. One has to try and understand others before judging them.”(P7 FG)
“It’s a privilege to have free health care. In our country, you have to pay for insurance. It’s very expensive and this is a luxury for me.”(P2 FG)
4. Discussion
4.1. The Effect of Acculturation
4.2. Humanity in Communication
4.3. Rebalancing the Care Relationship
Culturally Safe Care
4.4. Health Communication and Gender
4.5. Limitations
4.6. Implications
4.6.1. Public Health Implications
4.6.2. Practical Implications
4.6.3. Implications for Research
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Participant | Sex | Age | Country of origin | Years in Spain | Education Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
P1 | Man | 48 | Morocco | 30 | Primary school |
P2 | Man | 51 | Ecuador | 14 | Secondary school |
P3 * | Man | 37 | Pakistan | 6 | University |
P4 | Woman | 41 | Ivory Coast | 16 | Secondary school |
P5 | Man | 37 | Senegal | 9 | No schooling |
P6 * | Woman | 49 | Peru | 9 | University |
P7 | Woman | 34 | Morocco | 10 | Secondary school |
P8 | Woman | 38 | China | 12 | Secondary school |
Participant | Sex | Age | Country of origin | Years in Spain | Education level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
P1 * | Man | 37 | Pakistan | 6 | University |
P2 | Woman | 45 | Morocco | 15 | Secondary school |
P3 | Woman | 48 | Gambia | 29 | Primary school |
P4 * | Woman | 49 | Peru | 9 | University |
P5 | Man | 61 | Gambia | 41 | Primary school |
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Ramos-Roure, F.; Feijoo-Cid, M.; Manresa-Dominguez, J.M.; Segura-Bernal, J.; García-Sierra, R.; Fernández-Cano, M.I.; Toran-Monserrat, P. Intercultural Communication between Long-Stay Immigrants and Catalan Primary Care Nurses: A Qualitative Approach to Rebalancing Power. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 2851. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18062851
Ramos-Roure F, Feijoo-Cid M, Manresa-Dominguez JM, Segura-Bernal J, García-Sierra R, Fernández-Cano MI, Toran-Monserrat P. Intercultural Communication between Long-Stay Immigrants and Catalan Primary Care Nurses: A Qualitative Approach to Rebalancing Power. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(6):2851. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18062851
Chicago/Turabian StyleRamos-Roure, Francesc, Maria Feijoo-Cid, Josep Maria Manresa-Dominguez, Jordi Segura-Bernal, Rosa García-Sierra, Maria Isabel Fernández-Cano, and Pere Toran-Monserrat. 2021. "Intercultural Communication between Long-Stay Immigrants and Catalan Primary Care Nurses: A Qualitative Approach to Rebalancing Power" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 6: 2851. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18062851
APA StyleRamos-Roure, F., Feijoo-Cid, M., Manresa-Dominguez, J. M., Segura-Bernal, J., García-Sierra, R., Fernández-Cano, M. I., & Toran-Monserrat, P. (2021). Intercultural Communication between Long-Stay Immigrants and Catalan Primary Care Nurses: A Qualitative Approach to Rebalancing Power. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(6), 2851. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18062851