Journal of Nursing
Volume 58, Issue 3 SUPPL., 2011, Pages 85-89

Culturally competent care: Helping an immigrant mother's child with cancer return to elementary school (Article)

Hsu H.-C. , Huang M.-C.*
  • a Department of Nursing, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan
  • b Department of Nursing, Institute of Allied Health Science, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan, No. 1, University Road, Tainan City 70101, Taiwan

Abstract

In bicultural families in Taiwan, women who have immigrated to Taiwan and married a Taiwanese husband are often obligated to be the primary caregiver for their sick children. Thus, in Taiwan's transcultural healthcare environment these mothers are an important communication bridge between healthcare professionals and families. As mothers consider the education and development of their children while the latter recover from illness, they bear primary responsibility for communicating and coordinating amongst the family, hospital and school. Active and comprehensive nursing plans are needed to assist immigrant mothers and their children to complete treatment plans. The author is a primary nurse who helped the mother to understand care methods and how to integrate medical professional, teacher, and family member resources to make her child's reentry school successful. This article described the process of school reentry, follow-ups, specifc nursing intervention, and evaluation that contributed to the child achieving his developmental tasks. The author hopes this article can be a reference for clinical care and future research.

Author Keywords

School reentry Interracial marriage family Culturally Competent Care

Index Keywords

male Emigrants and Immigrants case report female Culture cultural anthropology Humans Mothers Hodgkin disease school psychological aspect nursing Article Schools human mother migration Child

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79959466772&partnerID=40&md5=3a2c0874a65e4b584ae4b7faaf71fd0a

ISSN: 0047262X
Original Language: Chinese