Nursing Reports (May 2022)

Qualified Nurses’ Perceptions of Cultural Competence and Experiences of Caring for Culturally Diverse Patients: A Qualitative Study in Four European Countries

  • Isabel Antón-Solanas,
  • Beatriz Rodríguez-Roca,
  • Valérie Vanceulebroeck,
  • Nuran Kömürcü,
  • Indrani Kalkan,
  • Elena Tambo-Lizalde,
  • Isabel Huércanos-Esparza,
  • Antonio Casa Nova,
  • Nadia Hamam-Alcober,
  • Margarida Coelho,
  • Teresa Coelho,
  • Yannic Van Gils,
  • Seda Degirmenci Öz,
  • Arzu Kavala,
  • Ana B. Subirón-Valera

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep12020034
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
pp. 348 – 364

Abstract

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Background: European nurses are expected to provide appropriate care for patients from diverse cultural backgrounds. However, there is limited knowledge and understanding of this process. The aim of this study was to analyse the perceptions of culture and experiences of caring for patients from diverse cultural backgrounds of a purposive sample of qualified nurses from four European countries, namely Belgium, Portugal, Spain and Turkey. Methods: A qualitative phenomenological approach was selected in order to understand complex phenomena through the participants’ lived experiences, meanings and perspectives. Individual interviews and focus groups took place with 28 staff nurses and 11 nurse managers from four European countries. The sociodemographic and cultural characteristics of the sample were described and analysed using descriptive statistics. Qualitative data were transcribed verbatim, translated into English and analysed following Braun and Clark’s phases for thematic analysis. Results: Five themes and twelve subthemes emerged from thematic analysis of the transcripts. The themes included: (1) relevance of culture for nursing; (2) culture in the healthcare service; (3) qualities of the healthcare professionals; (4) challenges to culturally competent care; (5) becoming a culturally competent nurse. Conclusions: There are challenges to the delivery of culturally congruent care, namely language and communication difficulties, prejudices and stereotyping in the health service, a tendency for ethnocentrism, a lack of education and training in cultural competence and a lack of support from the health service to facilitate new ways of acting.

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