Leiningers' Theory -Transcultural
Essay by review • February 7, 2011 • Study Guide • 524 Words (3 Pages) • 1,332 Views
Leininger’s theory is to provide care measures that are in harmony with an
individual or group’s cultural beliefs, practices, and values. In the 1960’s she
coined the term culturally congruent care, which is the primary goal of transcultural
nursing practice. Culturally congruent care is possible when the following
occurs within the nurse-client relationship (Leininger, 1981):
Together the nurse and the client creatively design a new or different
care lifestyle for the health or well-being of the client. This mode requires
the use of both generic and professional knowledge and ways to
fit such diverse ideas into nursing care actions and goals. Care knowledge
and skill are often repatterned for the best interest of the
clients…Thus all care modalities require coparticipation of the nurse and clients
(consumers) working together to identify, plan, implement, and evaluate each
caring mode for culturally congruent nursing care. These modes can stimulate
nurses to design nursing actions and decisions using new knowledge and culturally
based ways to provide meaningful and satisfying wholistic care to individuals,
groups or institutions (Leininger, 1991, p. 44).
Leininger developed new terms for the basic tenets of her theory. These
definitions and the tenets are important to understand. Understanding such
key terms is crucial to understanding the theory. Below is a basic summary of
the tenets that are essential to understand with Leininger’s theory (summarized
from Leininger, 2001, pp. 46вЂ"47):
• Care is to assist others with real or anticipated needs in an effort to
improve a human condition of concern or to face death.
• Caring is an action or activity directed towards providing care.
• Culture refers to learned, shared, and transmitted values, beliefs,
norms, and lifeways of a specific individual or group that guide their
thinking, decisions, actions, and patterned ways of living.
• Cultural care refers to multiple aspects of culture that influence and enable
a person or group to improve their human condition or to deal
with illness or death.
• Cultural care diversity refers to the differences in meanings, values, or acceptable
modes of care within or between different groups of people.
• Cultural care universality
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