A Description of the Purnell Model for Cultural Competence
- 1 January 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Transcultural Nursing
- Vol. 11 (1) , 40-46
- https://doi.org/10.1177/104365960001100107
Abstract
To meet the needs of a multicultural society, health care in the new millennium stresses teamwork in providing culturally sensitive and competent care to improve client outcomes. Publications addressing the future predict an increasingly diverse workforce. Accordingly, care providers can benefit from a conceptual model of cultural competence that can be used by all health disciplines in all practice settings. The Purnell Model for Cultural Competence, developed in 1995, is applicable to all health care providers. This article (a) describes the development of the model; (b) provides a description of the model; (c) lists the major assumptions on which the model is based; (d) describes the model’s use in practice, education, administration, and research across disciplines; and (e) includes a brief evaluation of the model. Important cultural domains missing from other transcultural and cross-cultural models, which are found in the Purnell Model, are biocultural ecology and workforce issues.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Panamanians’ Practices for Health Promotion and the Meaning of Respect Afforded them by Health Care ProvidersJournal of Transcultural Nursing, 1999
- Mexican American Women’s Expressions of the Meaning of Culturally Congruent Prenatal CareJournal of Transcultural Nursing, 1999
- Transcultural Nursing Study of Emic and Etic Care in the HomeJournal of Transcultural Nursing, 1999
- An Ethnohistory of a Granny MidwifeJournal of Transcultural Nursing, 1996
- Prenatal Care of African American Women in Selected USA Urban and Rural Cultural ContextsJournal of Transcultural Nursing, 1996
- Testing of nursing theoryAdvances in Nursing Science, 1992