Culture, Health and Wellbeing: Yarning with the Victorian Indigenous community

IF 1.2 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Alasdair Vance, J. McGaw, Di O'Rorke, Selena White, Sandra Eades
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Indigenous young people around the world suffer poorer mental health outcomes than their non-Indigenous counterparts. Currently, how culture matters for health, what cultural practices are used in community to support health and wellbeing, and how culture is passed on in Aboriginal contemporary life in south east Australia – a region most affected by settler-colonisation – is not well understood. This paper presents findings from yarns with a representative sample of 45 Indigenous participants working in the field of health and wellbeing that explored how culture interleaves with health and wellbeing. It used Grounded Theory as the overarching methodology with community participation in all aspects of the project. Participants were nominated through snowballing and screened by a governing Board of Elders. They included men and women of varied ages, half residing in urban areas and half from rural Victoria, Australia. They had declared affiliations to 31 Traditional tribal groups. The yarns were held over zoom between a FN research assistant who was part of the community, and each participant. Each was recorded, transcribed, coded and analysed by a multi-perspectival team. Culture was viewed as central to individual and communal life, and passed on through relationships with people and Country itself. A wide variety of cultural practices were used by community members to aid and maintain health and wellbeing in profound ways. Myriad obstacles to health and wellbeing exist were also described, from experiences of disconnection through to barriers for accessing services. These findings have the potential to shape future holistic care and policy.
文化、健康与幸福:与维多利亚州土著社区一起学习
与非土著年轻人相比,全世界土著年轻人的精神健康状况都较差。目前,人们对澳大利亚东南部--一个受殖民者殖民化影响最严重的地区--的文化如何影响健康、社区利用哪些文化习俗来支持健康和幸福,以及文化如何在原住民的当代生活中传承等问题还不甚了解。本文介绍了与 45 位在健康和福祉领域工作的土著参与者的代表性样本进行 "纱线 "研究的结果,探讨了文化如何与健康和福祉相互交织。该项目以基础理论为总体方法,社区参与了项目的各个方面。参与者通过滚雪球的方式提名,并由长老理事会筛选。他们包括不同年龄的男性和女性,一半居住在城市地区,一半来自澳大利亚维多利亚州的农村地区。他们声明隶属于 31 个传统部落群体。谈话是由一名身为社区成员的 FN 研究助理与每位参与者进行的。每个故事都由一个多视角小组进行记录、转录、编码和分析。文化被视为个人和社区生活的核心,并通过人际关系和国家本身传承。社区成员利用各种各样的文化习俗,以深刻的方式帮助和维护健康和福祉。他们还描述了影响健康和幸福的各种障碍,从与外界隔绝的经历到获得服务的障碍。这些发现有可能对未来的整体护理和政策产生影响。
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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发文量
16
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