Supporting the Journey Home: The Process of Co-designing an Education Program to Strengthen Palliative Care Capacity in First Nations Communities

IF 1.2 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Hsien Seow, Joanna Vautour, Valerie Bishop, Chantel Antone, Tessa Belleau, Brett Corbiere, Verna Fruch, Laura McCormick, Lori Monture, Margaret Civak, Shilpa Jyothi Kumar, Kayla McMillan, D. Bainbridge, Robin Cano
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Abstract

In Ontario, Canada, several training programs have been created to improve home-based palliative care in First Nations communities, though they primarily focus on meeting needs at end-of-life. Therefore, education focused on incorporating an early palliative care approach for community health-related workers is necessary. To address this gap, we tested the CAPACITI curriculum with 12 health care providers working in First Nations communities across Ontario, 11 of which were members of a First Nations community, and engaged them in a collaborative process to co-design an education program that they felt was representative of First Nations values and culture. The co-designers were trained as nurses (n=8), personal support workers (n=2), a social worker (n=1), and a physician (n=1). We met with them for 12 weekly one hour sessions. They completed a workbook of questions and recommendations to tailor the education to a First Nations community context. We incorporated these recommendations into the new education by reviewing existing material, making notes of suggested changes, and adding new content. We redesigned the education according to several themes: incorporating culture, recognizing First Nations health care workers and knowledge, and approaching education wholistically. The resulting program, Supporting the Journey Home: Growing the Community Bundle to Care for those with Serious Illness, gives First Nations health care providers practical resources to operationalize an early palliative care approach with community members. To our knowledge, this is the first study to describe the co-design process of an existing palliative care education program with First Nations health care providers.
支持回家之旅:共同设计教育计划以加强原住民社区姑息关怀能力的过程
在加拿大安大略省,为改善原住民社区以家庭为基础的姑息关怀,已经制定了一些培训计划,但这些计划主要侧重于满足生命末期的需求。因此,有必要对社区健康相关工作者开展以纳入早期姑息关怀方法为重点的教育。为了弥补这一不足,我们与在安大略省原住民社区工作的 12 名医疗服务提供者(其中 11 人是原住民社区的成员)一起测试了 CAPACITI 课程,并让他们参与合作过程,共同设计他们认为能够代表原住民价值观和文化的教育计划。共同设计者接受过护士(8 人)、个人支持工作者(2 人)、社会工作者(1 人)和医生(1 人)培训。我们每周与他们会面 12 次,每次一小时。他们完成了一份包含问题和建议的工作手册,以便根据原住民社区的情况调整教育内容。我们通过审查现有材料、记录修改建议和添加新内容,将这些建议纳入新的教育中。我们根据以下几个主题重新设计了教育:融入文化、认可原住民医护人员和知识,以及全面地开展教育。最终形成的计划名为 "支持回家之旅":该计划为原住民医疗服务提供者提供了实用的资源,使他们能够与社区成员一起实施早期姑息关怀方法。据我们所知,这是第一项描述与原住民医疗服务提供者共同设计现有姑息关怀教育项目过程的研究。
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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来源期刊
International Journal of Indigenous Health
International Journal of Indigenous Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
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