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Transcultural Nursing Society Chapter - Çàɬֱ²¥ and Mississippi

The Transcultural Nursing Society (TCNS) was founded by Dr. Madeleine Leininger. Dr. Leininger envisioned the importance of cultural care and understanding. She created a method of research, a definition of nursing, and the Theory of Culture Care Diversity and Universality.

Çàɬֱ²¥ and Mississippi Chapter and Louisiana Chapter

The Çàɬֱ²¥ and Mississippi Chapter and Louisiana Chapter are composed of members of the .

The International Society's mission is to enhance the quality of culturally congruent, competent, and equitable care that results in improved health and well-being for people worldwide.

The International Society's vision is to provide nurses and other healthcare professionals with the knowledge base necessary to ensure cultural competence in practice, education, research, and administration.

Join TCNS at tcns.org, and become a member of this chapter. Help promote cultural knowledge and understanding. Select the Çàɬֱ²¥ and Mississippi Chapter or the Louisiana Chapter as your own.

Leininger photoThe founder of the Society, Dr. Leininger, was an anthropologist and nurse. It was a new idea that culture should be considered when providing care. It is not only the nurse who is called to care and to consider the cultural practices of the person, it is all caring discipline members. Because of this stance, Dr. Leininger declared: "Nursing as a profession had a society charge, a mandate, and a moral expectation to serve society in meaningful and explicit public ways – the same criteria established by other professional scholars of what constitutes a profession" (Leininger, 1999, p. 25). We are cultural care providers. We all care. Every person is invited to join the Transcultural Nursing Society.