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28 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Offers intercultural trainers one more solid learning tool.
Rena Gropper has selected a proven tool, the cultural assimilator for addressing critical incidents faced by healthcare professionals in increasingly diverse patient/caregiver relationships. In Section One, the Introduction, she explains her choice of this method and rebaptizes it "intercultural sensitizer." Rightly so, as it's purpose is less to encourage...
Published on June 16, 1998 by Dr. George F. Simons (gsimons@...

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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars More In-Depth Please!
I found the book very shallow and typical. The book barely scratches the surface of this complex subject. Definately NOT worth the money.
Published on May 20, 2002 by johansyd


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28 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Offers intercultural trainers one more solid learning tool., June 16, 1998
This review is from: Culture and the Clinical Encounter: An Intercultural Sensitizer for the Health Professions (Paperback)
Rena Gropper has selected a proven tool, the cultural assimilator for addressing critical incidents faced by healthcare professionals in increasingly diverse patient/caregiver relationships. In Section One, the Introduction, she explains her choice of this method and rebaptizes it "intercultural sensitizer." Rightly so, as it's purpose is less to encourage assimilation, than to alert clinicians to the dynamics of difference in healthcare encounters.

Section Two contains 43 (my count -- it would have helped to number them) critical incidents that involve largely Asian, Latin, Native American, African American, Rom Gypsy and Muslim patients and professionals. There are representative questions from other cultures as well. Section Three gives the user feedback on his or her choices for each situation. Finally, Section Four revisits cultural behaviors briefly but coherently by topic and ties them into a general perspective.

Until too recently cultural information about patient-caregiver interactions was buried in medical monographs and professional journals, at best handed on by cognoscenti to their interns and associates. Diversity programs have been largely aimed at workplace relationships, not diverse patient needs.

Journalist Lynn Payer popularized the cultural side of medicine in 1988 in her informative and entertaining, Medicine and Culture. Starting in the early 1990's Suzanne Salimbene's series on What Language Does Your Patient Hurt In? signaled a healthy trend to providing practical cross-cultural training for caregivers. Her more recent Multicultural HealthCare Calendar and HealthCare DIVERSOPHY training game show the field beginning to mature. Rena Gropper's Culture and the Clinical Encounter offers educators and trainers one more solid learning technology.

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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars More In-Depth Please!, May 20, 2002
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"johansyd" (Dover, Delaware United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Culture and the Clinical Encounter: An Intercultural Sensitizer for the Health Professions (Paperback)
I found the book very shallow and typical. The book barely scratches the surface of this complex subject. Definately NOT worth the money.
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