By Miriam Bender
Associate Professor, UCI Sue & Bill Gross School of Nursing
Healthcare should be equally accessible to all, regardless of age, gender, race, ethnicity, and other factors.
Unfortunately, statistics show that minority groups are more likely to experience significant health conditions such as heart disease, cancer, stroke, and diabetes and die from these conditions.
Across the nation, there is a great effort to better understand and address health disparities to promote health equity.
Nurses have always been at the forefront of making meaningful changes toward health equity and play a crucial role in understanding, identifying, and responding to barriers that prevent people from having the opportunity to be as healthy as possible.
Generating nursing care delivery evidence
One of the ways UCI Nursing is moving the needle forward on nursing innovation is by generating much-needed evidence on nursing care delivery.
For example, one UCI faculty’s empirical nursing research programs explore the best ways to organize nursing in the hospital setting to impact patient care and outcomes. The team is currently implementing these findings and best practices at UCI Medical Center — a truly cutting-edge program.
UCI nursing faculty are tapping into the digital frontier and leveraging mobile technologies to offer stress management strategies and nursing-engaged AI to provide physical activity recommendations to patients who suffer from chronic conditions.
UCI nursing faculty are also utilizing wearable technology to address disparities in older adults and providing in-person hands-on education to elders to get them comfortable with using digital home monitoring tools.
The digital tools play hand-in-hand with moving the needle forward on cultural humility and caring with compassion. Nursing students at UCI train to be reflective listeners and seek trust with patients to integrate technology into patient care.
A center for health discourse
UCI’s Center for Nursing Philosophy serves as a convening arm for nurses in the United States and worldwide to engage in health discourse and share the latest scholarship on nursing philosophy. The center is the only academic organized nursing philosophy entity in the United States, filling a much-needed void.
The center’s goal is to lead the advancement of forward thinking about health and healthcare by supporting scholarly collaboration, publication and dissemination.
By engaging universities, scholars, and institutions worldwide at the upcoming Hybrid 25th International Nursing Philosophy Conference on Aug. 17-19, this forum will serve as an opportunity to cross-pollinate ideas and implementation strategies for addressing health disparities and furthering equitable care across the nursing spectrum.
Community-engaged approach
UCI Nursing is also implementing a community-engaged approach, to ensure the needs of diverse and minority populations are included to provide the highest level of cultural humility.
Diversity in nursing also ensures variety in language and cultural awareness. Nurses who can provide care in their patient’s native language or suggest appropriate resources help fill the gap for better health literacy and access to care.
One of the most powerful things nurses can do to reduce health disparities is to advocate for their patients. This may include advocating for patient rights, appropriate resources, interpreters, distress screening, or even cultural-competence training.
Addressing preventable health issues
Nurses can better address preventable health issues by considering social and environmental factors. Nurses with diverse backgrounds are more sensitive to these factors. Multiple studies have shown that racial and ethnic minority nurses are more likely to work in underserved areas, providing healthcare to those who experience health disparities.
Health disparities are not new, but there has been progress in righting this inequality. As our nation becomes increasingly diverse, it is important to identify health disparities and take steps to reduce and ultimately eliminate them.
UCI nurses are leading the way in building healthy communities and improving health where it matters, often starting in their neighborhoods and workplaces to bring about sustainable change.
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