Acknowledging colonialism in the room: Barriers to culturally safe care for Indigenous Peoples

Ashley Wilkinson, R. Schiff, Jacquie Kidd, H. Møller
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Indigenous peoples worldwide continue to face health inequities compared to non-Indigenous populations. Frameworks like cultural safety can be used to mitigate these inequities; however, this is not widely implemented in healthcare settings. Thus, additional research into barriers to providing culturally safe care are critical. To address this need, we examined the existing barriers to culturally safe care for Indigenous peoples in Canada, and Māori in Aotearoa New Zealand, through the perspectives of key informants. Major issues identified by key informants included systemic racism, lack of organisational accountability and/or buy-in, ineffective health-provider education, funding, health system structure, undervaluing Indigenous knowledge, negative framing, terminology, and changes to the concept of cultural safety over time. When examined closely, systemic racism and ongoing settler colonialism are the key driving forces underpinning many of the barriers identified. Findings from this research point to barriers at every level and require a system-wide, intersectoral approach in order to provide culturally safe care for Indigenous peoples and advance Indigenous health equity.
承认房间里的殖民主义:为土著人民提供文化安全护理的障碍
与非土著人口相比,世界各地的土著人民继续面临卫生方面的不平等。文化安全等框架可以用来减轻这些不平等;然而,这在医疗保健环境中并未得到广泛实施。因此,对提供文化安全护理的障碍进行进一步研究至关重要。为了满足这一需求,我们通过主要信息提供者的观点,研究了加拿大土著人民文化安全护理的现有障碍,以及新西兰奥特罗阿Māori。主要举报人指出的主要问题包括系统性种族主义、缺乏组织问责制和/或支持、卫生服务提供者教育无效、资金、卫生系统结构、低估土著知识、消极框架、术语以及文化安全概念随着时间的推移而发生变化。如果仔细研究,系统性种族主义和持续的定居者殖民主义是造成所确定的许多障碍的主要驱动力。这项研究的结果指出了各级存在的障碍,需要采取全系统、跨部门的办法,以便为土著人民提供文化上安全的护理,并促进土著卫生平等。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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