Cultural Appropriateness

CULTURAL APPROPRIATENESS

Sensitivity to other cultures refers to the awareness of how other ethnic, racial, and/or linguistic groups differ from one's own. Sensitivity can be manifested through knowledge of different languages or manners of speech, norms, and mores, religious beliefs and practices, family structures and dynamics, community decision-making patterns, and class consciousness and socioeconomic realities. Cultural appropriateness puts this sensitivity in action through the tailoring of public health interventions to specific cultures or subcultures. Thus, public-and clinical-health services, health behavior change interventions and social marketing, community organization and empowerment, and even environmental and occupational health approaches are adapted according to the target population to which they will be applied.

HISTORY OF IMPLEMENTATION IN PUBLIC HEALTH

Many countries, including the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Argentina, are almost entirely populated by immigrants and their descendants, which juxtaposed with the surviving indigenous populations make them highly diverse. Since World War II, European nations have become far more heterogeneous as well. Yet dominant groups are highly ambivalent about diversity. This ambivalence may contribute to negative health and social impacts on minority populations.

Concerns about diversity in the United States date from colonial time. As the new nation evolved, the founding fathers saw a need to populate the region with more Europeans (and their African slaves). Hence, the number of immigrants gradually accelerated until the beginning of the Civil War, when over 150,000 newcomers arrived each year. Nevertheless, public health efforts continued to emphasize the needs of the dominant population. Efforts directed toward disadvantaged and diverse groups were based more in controlling the spread of diseases that they might have had rather than in promoting their health itself. In the twenty-first century, immigrants continue to arrive in the United States and other industrialized countries at a record pace. Moreover they are now far more likely to come from Latin America, Asia, or Africa. Together these phenomena make the issues of cultural sensitivity and appropriateness more relevant than ever.


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