



This set of materials was produced by a nation-wide team of
healthcare professionals who, like you, are dedicated to
providing high quality, effective, and compassionate care to
their patients. Because of changes in demography, in our
awareness of differences in individual belief and behavior, and
new legal mandates, we are constantly presented with new
challenges in our attempts to deliver health care to a diverse
patient population. The material in this tool kit will provide
you with resources to address the very specific operational needs
that often arise in a busy practice because of the changing
service requirements and legal mandates.

The tool kit contents are organized into four sections, each
containing helpful background information and tools that can be
reproduced and used as needed. Below you will find a list of the
section topics and a small sample of their contents.

Interaction with a
diverse patient base: encounter tips for providers and
their clinical staff, a mnemonic to assist with patient
interviews, help in identifying literacy problems, and an
interview guide for hiring clinical staff who have an awareness
of diversity issues.

Communication across
language barriers: tips for locating and working with
interpreters, common signs and common sentences in many
languages, language identification flashcards, and language skill
self-assessment tools.

Understanding
patients from various cultural backgrounds: tips for
talking about sex with a wide range of people, pain management
across cultures, and information about different cultural
backgrounds.

References and
resources: some key legal requirements, a summary of the
“Culturally and Linguistically Appropriate Service (CLAS)
Standards,” which serve as a guide on how to meet legal
requirements, a bibliography of print resources, and a list of
internet resources.

We consider this tool kit a work in progress. Patient needs and
the tools we use to work with those changing needs will continue
to evolve. We understand that some portions of this tool kit will
be more useful than others for individual practices or service
settings, after all, practices vary as much as the places where
they are located. We encourage you to use what is helpful,
disregard what is not, and, if possible communicate your reaction
to the contents to the ICE Cultural and Linguistics Workgroup at:
CL_Team@iceforhealth.org
