Puritan laws believe another way of worshiping God. They believe that each role of a person is according to his role in the family. The major part of their practice, was of course by praying everyday. The human law is different as it aims to practice what is humane and fair which gives alternative that puritans cannot accept.
The strongest cross-cultural congruence in the identification of emotions seems to involve happiness and the weakest seems to involve fear and disgust
- Cultural congruence/competence is a process that involves effective interaction at both the provider and client levels. The model is based on the idea that cultural competence is ever-evolving; providers must continue to improve their communication quality, which leads to better care quality.
- Effective nursing care integrates people's beliefs and cultural values with the perspectives of a multidisciplinary team of health care providers. When you provide culturally appropriate care, you bridge cultural gaps in order to provide essential and supportive care to all patients.
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Hey there!
Erik Erikson developed and proposed 8 p<span>sychosocial stages of life. These, in order, are trust vs. mistrust, autonomy vs. shame, initiative vs. guilt, industry vs. inferiority, ego identity vs. role confusion, intimacy vs. isolation, generativity vs. stagnation, and ego integrity vs. despair.
It sounds like the last one, ego integrity vs. despair, is described in your problem. The last stage begins around maturity, or 65, and goes on until death. At this stage, people are often retiring or are retired, and start pondering the things they didn't do with their lives. This leads to regret about not doing certain things that they once hoped to do, or maybe didn't even realize they wanted to do at the time. They think that it's too late now, and start feeling dissatisfied with their life, as your question describes.
Hope this helped you out! :-)</span>