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Transcultural skills for early childhood professionals

CONTEXT: Transcultural skills are especially useful for those involved in the perinatal period, when parents and babies must adapt to one another in a setting of migration a long a focus of transcultural clinical practice. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this article is to provide useful transcultural skills...

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Autores principales: Radjack, Rahmeth, Bossuroy, Muriel, Camara, Hawa, Touhami, Fatima, Ogrizek, Anaïs, Rodriguez, Juliette, Robin, Marion, Moro, Marie Rose
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10160661/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37151984
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1112997
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author Radjack, Rahmeth
Bossuroy, Muriel
Camara, Hawa
Touhami, Fatima
Ogrizek, Anaïs
Rodriguez, Juliette
Robin, Marion
Moro, Marie Rose
author_facet Radjack, Rahmeth
Bossuroy, Muriel
Camara, Hawa
Touhami, Fatima
Ogrizek, Anaïs
Rodriguez, Juliette
Robin, Marion
Moro, Marie Rose
author_sort Radjack, Rahmeth
collection PubMed
description CONTEXT: Transcultural skills are especially useful for those involved in the perinatal period, when parents and babies must adapt to one another in a setting of migration a long a focus of transcultural clinical practice. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this article is to provide useful transcultural skills for any health care worker (e.g., psychologists, child psychiatrists, midwives, family doctors, pediatricians, specialized child-care attendants, and social workers) who provide care or support to families during the perinatal period. It highlights the cultural aspects requiring attention in relation to representations of pregnancy, children’s needs, obstetric complications, and postnatal problems. Taking into account the impact of culture on clinical evaluation and treatment can enable professionals to distinguish what involves cultural representations of pregnancy, babies, and sometimes of disease from what is associated with interaction disorders or maternal psychopathology. METHODS: After explaining the relevance of transcultural clinical practices to provide migrant mothers with better support, we describe 9 themes useful to explore from a transcultural perspective. This choice is based on the transcultural clinical practice in our specialized department. RESULTS: The description of these 9 themes is intended to aid in their pragmatic application and is illustrated with short clinical vignettes for specific concepts. We describe situations that are extreme but often encountered in liaison transcultural clinical practice for maternity wards: perinatal mourning with cultural coding, mediation in refusal of care, cultural misunderstandings, situations of complex trauma and of multiple contextual vulnerabilities, and difficulties associated with acculturation. DISCUSSION: The transcultural levers described here make it possible to limit cultural misunderstandings and to promote the therapeutic alliance. It presupposes the professionals will concomitantly analyze their cultural countertransference and acquire both the knowledge and know-how needed to understand the elements of cultural, political, and social issues needed to develop clinical finesse. CONCLUSION: This combined theoretical-clinical article is intended to be pedagogical. It provides guidelines for conducting transcultural child psychiatry/psychological interviews in the perinatal period aimed at both assessment and therapy.
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spelling pubmed-101606612023-05-06 Transcultural skills for early childhood professionals Radjack, Rahmeth Bossuroy, Muriel Camara, Hawa Touhami, Fatima Ogrizek, Anaïs Rodriguez, Juliette Robin, Marion Moro, Marie Rose Front Psychiatry Psychiatry CONTEXT: Transcultural skills are especially useful for those involved in the perinatal period, when parents and babies must adapt to one another in a setting of migration a long a focus of transcultural clinical practice. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this article is to provide useful transcultural skills for any health care worker (e.g., psychologists, child psychiatrists, midwives, family doctors, pediatricians, specialized child-care attendants, and social workers) who provide care or support to families during the perinatal period. It highlights the cultural aspects requiring attention in relation to representations of pregnancy, children’s needs, obstetric complications, and postnatal problems. Taking into account the impact of culture on clinical evaluation and treatment can enable professionals to distinguish what involves cultural representations of pregnancy, babies, and sometimes of disease from what is associated with interaction disorders or maternal psychopathology. METHODS: After explaining the relevance of transcultural clinical practices to provide migrant mothers with better support, we describe 9 themes useful to explore from a transcultural perspective. This choice is based on the transcultural clinical practice in our specialized department. RESULTS: The description of these 9 themes is intended to aid in their pragmatic application and is illustrated with short clinical vignettes for specific concepts. We describe situations that are extreme but often encountered in liaison transcultural clinical practice for maternity wards: perinatal mourning with cultural coding, mediation in refusal of care, cultural misunderstandings, situations of complex trauma and of multiple contextual vulnerabilities, and difficulties associated with acculturation. DISCUSSION: The transcultural levers described here make it possible to limit cultural misunderstandings and to promote the therapeutic alliance. It presupposes the professionals will concomitantly analyze their cultural countertransference and acquire both the knowledge and know-how needed to understand the elements of cultural, political, and social issues needed to develop clinical finesse. CONCLUSION: This combined theoretical-clinical article is intended to be pedagogical. It provides guidelines for conducting transcultural child psychiatry/psychological interviews in the perinatal period aimed at both assessment and therapy. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-04-21 /pmc/articles/PMC10160661/ /pubmed/37151984 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1112997 Text en Copyright © 2023 Radjack, Bossuroy, Camara, Touhami, Ogrizek, Rodriguez, Robin and Moro. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Psychiatry
Radjack, Rahmeth
Bossuroy, Muriel
Camara, Hawa
Touhami, Fatima
Ogrizek, Anaïs
Rodriguez, Juliette
Robin, Marion
Moro, Marie Rose
Transcultural skills for early childhood professionals
title Transcultural skills for early childhood professionals
title_full Transcultural skills for early childhood professionals
title_fullStr Transcultural skills for early childhood professionals
title_full_unstemmed Transcultural skills for early childhood professionals
title_short Transcultural skills for early childhood professionals
title_sort transcultural skills for early childhood professionals
topic Psychiatry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10160661/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37151984
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1112997
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