41% of Patients Make Decisions Based on Religious Beliefs
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EmblemHealth Sponsored Tanenbaum Center for Interreligious Understanding to Write Comprehensive Guide Vetted by Medical and Religious Experts
To meet the needs of its diverse clinician and patient constituency, EmblemHealthtoday announced publication of what is believed to be the first comprehensive guide to help physicians and medical professionals address the needs of patients whose health care decisions are influenced by their religious and cultural beliefs. The Medical Manual for Religio-Cultural Competency is sponsored by EmblemHealth and created by the Tanenbaum Center For Interreligious Understanding, a globalleader in training health care providers to offer religiously and culturally competent care for patients of all ages and backgrounds.
“We believe this is the first publication to address the role of religion in medical care in such a comprehensive and concrete way,” says Dr. William A. Gillespie,SVP and Chief Medical Officer of EmblemHealth. “It supports our efforts to address disparities in care and barriers to access by improving and enhancing communication between practitioners and patients.”
According to one study, 41 percent of those who responded said they make health care-related decisions for themselves or their loved ones based on religious beliefs while 83 percent want their health care providers to ask about their religious needs. Only nine percent actually reported having been asked. [Annals of Family Medicine (2004) 2(4): 356-361]
The 230-page Medical Manual was researched and written by Tanenbaum professionals with expertise in religious diversity and how it relates to health care, and vetted by outside medical and religious experts. It allows health care professionals to quickly locate information on specific religious traditions and practices, including nutrition and diet, modesty and dress, pain management, birth, organ donation, and palliative care. It includes additional resources for those who want to learn more. Religious traditions covered are Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, Sikhism, Shinto, Traditional Chinese, American Indian & Alaska Natives and Afro-Caribbean.
“Publication of this manual on the religious and cultural issues that influence health care decisions is part of our ongoing commitment to leadership in innovative health care practices that are relevant to today’s needs,” Dr. Gillespie adds, noting that New Jersey already requires physicians to undergo “cultural-competency training” in order to obtain and renew a license by the State Board of Medical Examiners. He says similar legislation has been introduced in other states, including New York, and that EmblemHealth is looking at ways to offer CME credits for its physicians.
Through its affiliated companies, HIP Health Plan of NY and GHI Group Health Incorporated, EmblemHealth serves a diverse population of members, physicians and other providers in New York City and the tristate area. EmblemHealth targeted providers in New York’s most diverse counties, offering nearly 6,000 of them an opportunity to reserve a free copy of The Medical Manual. In addition, all EmblemHealth practitioners will be able to log on to EmblemHealth’s website (www.emblemhealth.com) to download a copy, also free of charge. Tanenbaum plans to make The Medical Manual available to health care organizations and medical professionals nationwide following EmblemHealth’s release.
Tanenbaum and EmblemHealth’s Integrative Wellness Department agreed that The Medical Manual was a much-needed resource to enhance EmblemHealth’s efforts to address the stated needs of its practitioners. EmblemHealth surveys indicated physicians’ desire for resources addressing religious diversity and cultural issues in medical practice, leading to their sponsorship of Tanenbaum to research and write the manual.
“We’re proud that EmblemHealth turned to us to develop this groundbreaking resource,” says Joyce S. Dubensky, Executive Director & CEO of Tanenbaum, a secular non-profit organization based in New York that has extensive experience designing practical tools to help navigate sensitive interreligious issues. “Tanenbaum’s expertise in helping medical professionals become more alert to the role religion and culture plays in health care outcomes complemented EmblemHealth’s desire to provide resources to improve the quality of care. We were able to leverage our years of experience and to harness our and EmblemHealth’s relationships with key leaders to produce a first-of-its-kind resource that can change how health care is provided.”
About EmblemHealth:
EmblemHealth, Inc., through its affiliated companies Group Health Incorporated (GHI) and HIP Health Plan of New York (HIP), delivers quality, affordable health insurance to 3.4 million people and provides a range of plan choices and attractive benefit options. Members have a choice of networks, including access to over 92,000 quality doctors and other providers and most of the leading hospitals across the tristate region. For more information, visit www.emblemhealth.com.
About the Tanenbaum Center For Interreligious Understanding:
The Tanenbaum Center for Interreligious Understanding is a secular, non-sectarian organization that reduces and prevents the ignorance, intolerance and hatred perpetrated in the name of religion by overcoming religious intolerance in workplaces, health care facilities and schools and by supporting religious peacemakers struggling in areas of armed conflict. Tanenbaum’s Religious Diversity in Health Care program trains providers to offer religiously and culturally competent care for patients of all ages and backgrounds through “how to” manuals, interactive training sessions, webinars/e-learning, Grand Rounds presentations, policy reviews, institutional assessments and tailored consultations. For more information, visitwww.tanenbaum.org.
Contacts:
Rubenstein Associates, Inc.
Public Relations
Nadine Woloshin,
212-843-8041
or
Ashley Trager Chauvin, 212-843-9345