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Cultural competence is a practice of values and attitudes that aims to optimize the healthcare experience of patients with cross cultural backgrounds. [6] Essential elements that enable organizations to become culturally competent include valuing diversity, having the capacity for cultural self-assessment, being conscious of the dynamics inherent when cultures interact, having ...
Health care clinics, including free clinics, can help individuals with transportation and health care costs alleviate issues that come up like transportation and financial constraints. [47] [48] [49] Policy wise, it is recommended to continue investing in the health of the poor by creating an amendment or law and increasing affordable housing.
The social determinants of health in poverty describe the factors that affect impoverished populations' health and health inequality. Inequalities in health stem from the conditions of people's lives, including living conditions, work environment, age, and other social factors, and how these affect people's ability to respond to illness. [1]
Columbia’s War on Poverty: Healthcare Access for Missouri’s Vulnerable Communities
According to the United States Census, in 2012 people aged 18–64 living in poverty in the country gave the reason they did not work, by category: [6] 31% – Ill or disabled; 26% – Home or family reasons; 21% – School or other; 13% – Cannot find work; 8% – Retired early; Some activities can also cost poor people more than wealthier ...
Poor health outcomes appear to be an effect of economic inequality across a population. Nations and regions with greater economic inequality show poorer outcomes in life expectancy, [31]: Figure 1.1 mental health, [31]: Figure 5.1 drug abuse, [31]: Figure 5.3 obesity, [31]: Figure 7.1 educational performance, teenage birthrates, and ill health due to violence.
The situation was described as a ‘cruel irony’ as one of the ‘founding principles of the NHS is that it is free at the point of need’.
Further, CMA emphasizes structures of power and inequality in health care systems and the contributions of health ideas and practices in reinforcing inequalities in the wider society. Moreover, CMA addresses the social origins of illness, such as the way in which poverty, discrimination, industrial pollution of the environment, social violence ...