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Culturally responsive care in haemodialysis: A scoping review

journal contribution
posted on 2024-08-20, 02:24 authored by Sara AryalSara Aryal, Paul N Bennett, Melissa BloomerMelissa Bloomer
AbstractAimTo describe how clinicians provide culturally responsive care to culturally diverse people with kidney failure in haemodialysis centres.BackgroundCulturally diverse individuals receiving in‐centre maintenance haemodialysis have unique cultural needs. Unmet cultural needs can impair and profoundly affect their experiences. Given culturally responsive care has the potential to enhance the experiences of culturally diverse people, it is vital to understand how clinicians provide culturally responsive care.MethodA scoping review was undertaken using Arksey and OMalleys framework. Five databases: Medline and CINAHL Complete (EBSCO), PsycINFO, Embase (OVID) and ProQuest Theses and Dissertation databases were searched for research literature published in English between 1990 and 2023. Narrative synthesis was used to synthesise the data.ResultsFrom the 17,271 records screened, 17 papers reporting 14 studies met the inclusion criteria. Narrative synthesis revealed two themes: (i) communication enablers and barriers including linguistic differences, professional and lay interpreter use; and (ii) the importance of culture, which encompassed acknowledging cultural priorities, accommodating cultural food preferences and access to cultural training.ConclusionWhile competing priorities associated with haemodialysis may be a challenge for clinicians, recognising the significance of cultural care needs and accommodating them in care is important. Demonstrating respect towards cultural diversity and providing person‐centred care by facilitating the unique cultural needs of people with kidney failure in haemodialysis is imperative.Relevance to Clinical PracticeCulturally responsive care is complex and multidimensional. Individuals' cultural care needs should be acknowledged, respected, and accommodated in care.Patient or Public contributionNo patient or public contribution. The study protocol was registered in the Open Science Framework. https://osf.io/uv8g3.

History

Journal

Journal of Clinical Nursing

Pagination

1-13

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0962-1067

eISSN

1365-2702

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

Wiley