It is not enough to merely partake in conversations regarding health disparities, inequities, and social injustices, there needs to be movement toward changing the systems that gave birth to them. Therefore, to better appreciate diverse informal elder caregivers and their care recipients, aging organizations and health care providers need a better understanding of their values, belief systems, ways of thinking and behaving, so they are better equipped to identify cultural influences that act as barriers (Goodenough, 1981), while acknowledging social injustices in their communities, influence on health disparities and inequities. Goodenough defines (as cited in Dilworth-Anderson et al., 2012, p. 30-31) culture as a set of “shared symbols,…