Health Equity & Inclusion

Every child and every family is different. Each has their own specific needs, opinions, beliefs, religions, and cultural backgrounds — all of which can impact how they view and would like to receive health care. That’s why we created the Office of Health Equity and Inclusion (OHEI) to help us be respectful, sensitive, and mindful of the cultural and spiritual needs and differences of the children and families we see every day.

We’re here to learn, listen, and help inform every member of our staff about what we
can all do to treat you and your child with the care and respect you deserve — tailored
to you.

Our Firm Commitment to Equal Care

Our Office of Health Equity and Inclusion seeks to partner with you, the families. We want you to let us know how you’d prefer to be treated — and how we could improve our care to best help your family through every age and stage. We want to hear about your cultural background, beliefs, and language needs to help us give you the very best care we can.

Our Language & Interpreter Services

To make sure you understand everything about your child’s care (from diagnoses to treatments to discharge instructions), we offer interpreter services for children and families who don’t speak English in these locations.

Why This Is Important to Us

To fulfill our promise to care for every child as we would our own, we know we need a deep respect of different cultures, languages, genders, religions, socioeconomic statuses, and more. Only then can we truly understand the needs of the children we see. And only then will children and their families truly understand the care they’re receiving — and what they need to do after they leave our hospital to help ensure children’s health and well-being.

The Office of Health Equity and Inclusion will help us all become more aware by partnering with our patients and communities — and collecting and providing needed input from families like yours.

Research shows that patients and families of different cultural backgrounds and languages are not only often treated differently (and less effectively) while they’re at our nation’s hospitals, they also often don’t understand their diagnoses, care plans, and discharge instructions as well as they could if they were given the proper care and attention to their specific needs.

This creates situations where patients’ conditions have been compromised — they don’t get better, they get worse, and/or they often end up right back at the same hospitals, simply because they didn’t have the information and guidance they needed to completely understand how to manage their conditions.

If we are to give consistently equal health care and get consistently equal outcomes (results) for everyone, health care systems nationwide need to do
a better job of understanding and communicating with all of our patients and
their families.

Contact Us

The Nemours Office of Health Equity and Inclusion

252 Chapman Road
Christiana Building, Suite 200
Newark, DE 19702
(302) 444-9070
OHEI@nemours.org

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