Afghan Americans
Afghan Americans
Afghan Americans
Americans
Transcultural Nursing
General Objectives
Değer (2017)
What do we know
about Afghanistan?
Overview
• Afghanistan has two national languages: Dari, a dialect of Persian (50%), and Pashto (35%)
• most Afghans speak either Dari or Pashto with regional variations, or another local mother tongue,
and many speak two or three other languages in addition to English, such as Urdu, Hindi, or German.
Many educated Afghans also speak Russian.
• Afghans tend to speak in stories rich in context, rather than providing brief answers to specific
Add family
questions. Generally, people are reluctant to share personal and a text quote,
issuesphoto,
with or videoother than
people
family members, including health care professionals, but women may discuss
to support their
your ideaproblems with
friends, including non-Afghans. Men do not discuss their personal problems with others.
• women speak loudly, men, on the other hand, tend to speak in soft tones in private or public settings,
• generally call elderly persons by respectful terms, such as uncle, aunt, or mother
• Determinants of touch are family relationships and gender
• Islamic rules apply when it comes to touching others depending on your relation
• Greetings between people who are not family members or close friends may be a simple nod or a
handshake, but a man should wait for a woman to extend her hand first
Afghan Americans
• youth do not look elders directly in the eyes, but stand turned slightly to the
side, with their heads slightly down to convey proper respect
• When an elderly person or the head of a family enters the room, people show
their respect by standing.
• People kiss the back of an elderly person’s hand as a sign of respect and
acknowledgment of his or her wisdom, which comes with age
• Sustained eye contact varies by acculturation and generation. More traditional
unrelated men and women do not sustain eye contact nor do they “insult”
someone they perceive to be of higher status by making direct eye contact. In
general, health providers should avoid winking at or touching a person of the
opposite gender. Winking is seen as flirting and should be avoided.
Implications for Nursing Care
• Assess for how long the family has been in the US , acculturation leve,
origin (rural or urban), cosmopolitan or traditional.
• Ask who makes the decisions
• Family obligations and traditional hierarchy may interfere with getting
appointments or compliance.
• Be aware of the strong aversion of the Afghans to interference in family
affairs which they see as private.
• perceive school and social service agency intervention as undermining
parental control
• physical discipline of children
Environmental Control
• Afghans are very concerned about their health
• combine internal and external locus of control
• as well as natural and supernatural concepts of health and illness belief and behavior
• believes that health is maintained through regular exercise, eating fresh food and a
balanced diet, staying warm and getting enough rest
• natural illness are believed to be caused by the thingss that exist in nature such as the
germs, dirt, cold and wind.
• during the change of seasons people are more vulnerable to cold or flu
• if one is not taking care of one's body it will result to illness
• illness can also be interpreted as the "will of God" and should be borne with patience as it
cleanses one of individual sins
• illness is also perceived as a result of not adhering to the principles of Islam
Environmental Control
• Islam strongly emphasizes personal hygiene
• washing bodies before praying (ablution)
• washing of feet, face, hand, nose and inside the throat
• if a person passes gas, urinates, bleeds etc. he must wash again because he is impure
• after sex a person must wash from head to to foot before he is fit to pray
• women are prohibited to pray and to fast during menstruation until they perform a
purification ritual in 7 days
• supernatural illness are caused by "jins", the evil eye (nazar) or punishment from God
• epilepsy, evil eye,
• traditional medicine and prayers
Environmental Control
Illness and wellness behavior and access to healthcare
• barriers to care is lack of health insurance
• no culturally specific services
• Dari and Pashto health education materials are rarely available
• newly arrived Afghans have a lot of health issues like tuberculosis, parasitism,
nutritional deficiences
• Long staying Afghans in the US have diabetes, asthma and motor vehicle injuries
• birth control is a problem, pap smears, breast exams
A. Reassure the family that the you are going to be their at the doctors side when he examines the
patient.
B. Offer to examine the girl on the doctor's behalf.
C. Talk to the father of the girl that the doctor needs to palpate the area to accurately diagnose the
girl and that you are going to be with the doctor when he examines her.
D. Tell the patient to convince her parents to allow the doctor to see her .
Tashakor barakat