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Museum Of Tolerance Reflection

Decent Essays

Different colors, different faces, diverse cultures and traditions seen in one place- Los Angeles is indeed a “melting pot”. Given this remarkable cultural diversity, issues of unfair treatment still arise. The aim of this journal is to reflect on my experience at the Museum of Tolerance, identify a personal experience where I witnessed unfair treatment of another person, describe the significance of ethics in public health, talk about the relevance of social justice in public health, examine the impact of racism in healthcare, and what can I do as a nurse to stop unfair treatments from happening in healthcare.
I have always heard of the Holocaust, but I honestly was not familiar about its impact until I went to the Museum of Tolerance. I …show more content…

The first three went breezily without a problem, however, when it came to the fourth member of the group, the security stopped him and checked his belongings. I remember his friends laughing and saying “Sure, three white guys passed without getting checked and the black guy gets checked.” Another encounter I experienced was during my clinical rotation where one nurse told me to wear a mask because our patient is Black and has HIV. I also witnessed people choosing to stand in the bus rather than sit next to a Black person. Sure, these people I mentioned did not show they care about how other people perceive them, but maybe because they were used to it already. Even though we live in a modern age, primitive attitudes like this makes the world a harder place to live in, especially for those who are targeted by social injustice and racial segregation. Blacks might not have the best reputation, but that does not mean they are all bad. With the election of Barack Obama as the United States president, one would think that racism and social injustice would be over in the community, but 7 years after he first started, it is still rampant (Fofana, 2014).
Ethics in public health is different from ethics in acute care. In the acute care setting, the patient’s decision is followed through informed consent, while in public health, what the patient wants might not always be implemented because the …show more content…

They stated that the infection rates are high in this population, accounting for around 5.9% to 12% annually (Matthews et al., 2016). A meta-analysis done by Millett et al. cited in this study found out that there was no difference between risk behaviors between Black men and other groups who are homosexual. But why is it that Black men still have a higher rate than any other groups? Several studies have shown that racism in healthcare is rampant up until now, and constitutes a problem of social justice in public health because of the treatment differences, therefore having no equal distribution of privileges among the entire community.
In a systematic review done by Hall et al. (2015), they found out that most healthcare workers displayed a positive attitude towards Whites compared to negative attitudes shown not just to Blacks but all people of color. This creates a dilemma for it threatens not just the treatment outcomes and the overall health of one patient, but of the entire population as

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