TOOLKIT
Curriculum Fundamentals
It is critical to emphasize that health care system encounters should be centered on the individual and family, avoiding assumptions and stereotypes.
Cultural competence trainings of healthcare providers and staff should aim to improve learners’ knowledge, attitudes, skills, and behaviors. The specific content of a training or program will vary depending on the amount of time allotted, the professional backgrounds of A term referring to providers and other staff who undergo trainings, in order to underscore the goal of continuous learning rather than a one-time communication of a defined set of facts., and their job description relative to providing healthcare or related services. Moreover, cultural competence trainings will differ based on the specific goals and issues faced by the organization or health care practice.
- • provide essential information about concepts and terminology, culture, discrimination, and health disparities;
- provide information on health-promotion strategies for people that address institutional and interpersonal catalysts of resilience as well as barriers to health;
- • promote awareness of how people may differ in their needs and concerns, based on race, ethnicity, income and resources, cultural background, and other identities and life experiences;
- • promote self-awareness of the learner’s assumptions and implicit biases along with tools and resources for addressing them; and
- • facilitate the development of skills that will allow providers and staff to provide patient-and family-centered care that is discerning, respectful, and non-judgmental by eliciting each patient’s specific needs, history, and concerns, and facilitating shared decision-making of patient and provider.
- Basic concepts of The type of sexual, romantic, emotional/spiritual attraction one has the capacity to feel for some others, generally labeled based on the gender relationship between the person and the people they are attracted to., The internal perception of one’s gender, and how they label themselves, based on how much they align or don’t align with what they understand their options for gender to be. and expression; The biological process through which chromosomes, gonads, hormones, internal sex organs, and genitals change from conception through adolescence. and variations in sex characteristics including basic facts about intersex people; and essential terminology. (See Example)
- Healthcare disparities – both between and non- persons, and within communities – and their relationship to stigma, discrimination, minority stress, and reasons for distrust of health care providers. It is useful to include local as well as national data when available, to summarize the particular challenges and disparities experienced by subpopulations. In addition, it is recommended to tailor the presentation of disparities to the particular work of the learner audience – e.g., Broadly, people related by marriage and biological descent and mutual assent. This document includes in family a person's chosen family or found family, which are people who support an LGBTQI person, which may include those who are not biologically related, and who may fill the role of the biological family if an LGBTQI person’s biological family is not supportive of them. medicine, mental health provider, executive leadership, geriatric nursing, pediatric care, facility security. Where relevant, it may also be helpful to illustrate how stigma and discrimination can affect the health of people over a lifetime – e.g., the long-term implications of discrimination and stigma on young people; and the particular challenges faced by elders who may have lived with stigma and discrimination for decades, including potentially in health care settings.. (See Example)
- Applicable nondiscrimination requirements of federal, state, and local laws, professional and ethical standards of care, and institutional policies. (See Example)
- How The type of sexual, romantic, emotional/spiritual attraction one has the capacity to feel for some others, generally labeled based on the gender relationship between the person and the people they are attracted to., The internal perception of one’s gender, and how they label themselves, based on how much they align or don’t align with what they understand their options for gender to be. and expression, and variations in sex characteristics intersect with race, ethnicity, immigration status, and other stigmatized or marginalized identities in the relevant population (e.g. Washington DC’s large community of A gender description for someone who has transitioned (or is transitioning) from living as one gender to another. Also an umbrella term for anyone whose sex assigned at birth and gender identity do not correspond in the expected way (e.g., someone who was assigned male at birth, but does not identify as a man). immigrants) or service area (e.g., gender-queer youth in white rural communities; people who inject drugs and are living with or at risk for HIV). It is very important that discussion of An idea that considers how the interconnectedness of social identities (e.g., race, religion, country of origin) can create interdependent systems of oppression and resilience. not be limited to the simple point that most people have multiple identities. Discussion of An idea that considers how the interconnectedness of social identities (e.g., race, religion, country of origin) can create interdependent systems of oppression and resilience. should focus on the multiple ways in which individuals with different identities experience oppression and are situated differently in power relationships. (See Example)
- Implicit bias and microaggressions; self-awareness and self-reflection. Awareness of how certain privileges may “blind” service providers to the realities that confront oppressed minorities, for example, heterosexual privilege, white privilege, male privilege, cisgender privilege, and gender-conforming privilege. Further, that many in the medical community may have been trained under modes of treatment that do not center patient autonomy. These forms of oppression may be exacerbated by the power dynamics that frequently exist between providers and patients. (See Example)
- Effective communication skills; building affirming environments; how to acknowledge and recover from mistakes, for example when a patient is misgendered. (See Example)
- How to ask questions about The type of sexual, romantic, emotional/spiritual attraction one has the capacity to feel for some others, generally labeled based on the gender relationship between the person and the people they are attracted to., The internal perception of one’s gender, and how they label themselves, based on how much they align or don’t align with what they understand their options for gender to be. and expression, and sex characteristics in a respectful manner, and how to meaningfully utilize this information for safe, affirming, non-judgmental care. (See Example)
- How to avoid disrespectful and clinically inappropriate questions – for instance, questions about a patient’s intersex traits which are not relevant to the health issues the patient is presenting. (See Example)
- How stigmas impacting sexual, gender and The biological process through which chromosomes, gonads, hormones, internal sex organs, and genitals change from conception through adolescence. (intersex) minorities (and other stigmatized or marginalized identities) creates barriers to high-quality healthcare and can cause or exacerbate poor health. (See Example)
- How to appreciate and communicate respect for a patient’s The type of sexual, romantic, emotional/spiritual attraction one has the capacity to feel for some others, generally labeled based on the gender relationship between the person and the people they are attracted to., The internal perception of one’s gender, and how they label themselves, based on how much they align or don’t align with what they understand their options for gender to be. or expression, and/or intersex traits/sex characteristics, and to appreciate ways in which the patient’s minority status, and the related obstacles they have encountered, may have stimulated resilience and strengths. In this regard, it is important to emphasize ways in which a health care provider or staff person can either contribute to, or help alleviate, strong feelings of isolation and internalized stigma that many individuals and families experience. It is also recommended to provide examples of how past misunderstanding or mistreatment experienced by individuals and families may have led them to mistrust providers and to withhold information. (See Example)
The curriculum should align with the learning objectives. For shorter and single-session trainings, most of the learning objectives focus on increasing the learners’ knowledge and awareness. Changing attitudes takes time and is unlikely to happen in a single training. Likewise, skills-building may take multiple sessions. However, even if time is limited, there should be at least one exercise or reflection that focuses on empathy.
Trainers should keep in mind that health care providers may be habitually predisposed to emphasize “hard” knowledge (a specific set of facts or conceptual categories or rules of thumb for a patient encounter) over “soft” skills of respectful listening and communication, and reflective awareness of one’s own assumptions and emotional responses. Such a predisposition should be expressly acknowledged and addressed by emphasizing the importance of listening and communication skills, and an open, respectful attitude, to good patient care (See Example).
Trainers should specifically name what is and what is not being addressed (or being addressed only superficially) in a specific training. For instance, trainers should explicitly note if a training session is addressing A woman who is primarily attracted romantically, erotically, and/or emotionally to other women. Women and non-binary people may use this term to describe themselves., Experiencing attraction solely (or primarily) to some members of the same gender. Can be used to refer to people of any gender who are attracted to other people of the same gender. Also an umbrella term used to refer to the queer community as a whole, or as an individual identity label for anyone who is not straight. and A person who experiences attraction to some people of their gender and another gender. Bisexual attraction does not have to be equally split, or indicate a level of interest that is the same across the genders an individual may be attracted to. Often used interchangeably with “pansexual”. people but not A gender description for someone who has transitioned (or is transitioning) from living as one gender to another. Also an umbrella term for anyone whose sex assigned at birth and gender identity do not correspond in the expected way (e.g., someone who was assigned male at birth, but does not identify as a man). and gender Describes a person whose gender identity falls outside of the traditional gender binary structure of girl/woman and boy/man. Sometimes abbreviated as NB or enby. individuals. Another example is stating directly to the participants if the experiences of individuals who speak languages other than English or recent immigrants are not addressed.
Similarly, given the diversity of people, it is very important that the audience not assume that the experiences of the trainers are representative of the entire community. Therefore, consider the intersectional identities of the trainers and how this might impact the session content or how participants interpret it. For example, if all of the trainers are white and primarily have experience with white patients, these gaps should be explicitly acknowledged. When this happens, figure out ways to bring in absent voices, for example, through videos or a guest speaker (See Example).