Hospice organizations must
take proactive outreach roles in presenting the benefits hospice provides,
while making all recipients of their services feel welcomed and respected.
These are a few examples of outreach best practices:
1. Having a committee to identify, educate, and serve
populations not
being served
2. Changing photos on brochures and other media materials to reflect diverse
populations
3. Making cultural diversity an important part of staff
development and
recruitment
4. Having 24/7 language interpretation services provided
and included in media outreach
5. Participating in racial-ethnic and cultural health
initiatives, festivals, and events
I recently visited the
Arab American National Museum in Dearborn, Michigan. As soon as the guide
approached me, I said, “As-Salāmu`Alaykum,” probably with a Southern drawl.
This is an Arabic greeting often translated as “Peace be with you.” It’s used among Muslims
around the world. The guide immediately smiled widely, not because my Arabic
language skills are good, but I think because he appreciated that I had made an
effort to respect his culture. It may seem like a small thing, but my personal
language “outreach” brought a new energy and acceptance to our meeting. That’s what
diversity outreach can do.
In the video below
titled Avow Hospice Speaks the Language of Care & Compassion, Avow Hospice sends a similar kind of
message to their website viewers by addressing them
in Spanish, French, Creole, and English, demonstrating that “care, compassion,
and respect for family traditions and culture have no language boundaries.”
Their website, which, translates into other languages, reaches out.
Sharing successful
diversity outreach best practices can be a great strategy for hospices in
promoting diversity in larger numbers.
Surely, there are hospice organizations that have created positive
diversity outreach practices that can benefit others. By sharing what your organization is doing, you send
messages to other hospice organizations, potential staff
members, patients, and community members that you support the hospice
philosophy of quality end-of-life care for everyone.
Frances Shani Parker,
Author
Becoming Dead Right: A Hospice Volunteer
in Urban Nursing Homes is available in paperback and e-book
editions in America and other countries at online and offline booksellers.
Thank you for showing the diversity here. Hospice is for everyone!
ReplyDeleteThank you for commenting. Actually, I have addressed the hospice diversity issue in previous posts. Unfortunately, few hospices have responded or shared their best practices on this topic.
ReplyDelete