Looking back, moving forward: a culture-based framework to promote mental wellbeing in Manitoba First Nations communities

Q1 Social Sciences
Grace Kyoon-Achan, Wanda Philips-Beck, J. Lavoie, R. Eni, Stephanie Sinclair, Kathi Avey Kinew, Naser Ibrahim, A. Katz
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引用次数: 13

Abstract

ABSTRACT In Canada, high rates of anxiety, depression and suicides have resulted in mental health crises in First Nation (FN) communities. To date, Indigenous worldviews and approaches have not been fully heeded in mainstream strategies to address the complexity of living in colonial oppression, despite ongoing crises for decades. We describe perspectives of eight FN communities explaining cultural facilitators of mental wellbeing. The objective is to promote understanding of wellbeing in the context of sociocultural realities of FN communities and elaborate community-based practices. Qualitative methods involved FN partners in study design, implementation and data interpretation processes. Local research assistants collected data in all participating communities. Respondents were purposefully selected, Elders were recommended based on their knowledge of FN cultures and traditional wellness practices and awareness of health and social issues in respective communities. Results challenge specific histories of dispossession and assaults on community, language, identity, Elders, family; traditional healing practices emerged as important in enhancing mental wellbeing among FN. Culturally informed approaches aim to restore balance and harmony as pre-requisite to health. A framework based on the voices of FN in Manitoba is proposed for achieving mental wellbeing by and for FN people as an integral part of primary healthcare.
回顾过去,向前迈进:以文化为基础的框架,以促进马尼托巴省第一民族社区的心理健康
在加拿大,焦虑、抑郁和自杀的高发率导致了原住民(FN)社区的心理健康危机。迄今为止,尽管几十年来危机不断,但在解决殖民压迫下生活的复杂性的主流战略中,土著的世界观和方法尚未得到充分重视。我们描述了八个FN社区的观点,解释了心理健康的文化促进因素。其目标是在民族民族社区的社会文化现实背景下促进对福利的理解,并详细阐述以社区为基础的做法。定性方法涉及FN合作伙伴的研究设计、实施和数据解释过程。当地研究助理收集了所有参与社区的数据。受访者是有目的地选择的,根据长者对民族文化和传统保健做法的了解以及对各自社区卫生和社会问题的认识来推荐他们。结果挑战了对社区、语言、身份、长者和家庭的剥夺和攻击的具体历史;传统的治疗方法在提高FN群体的心理健康方面发挥了重要作用。了解文化的方法旨在恢复平衡与和谐,这是健康的先决条件。提出了一个以马尼托巴民族的声音为基础的框架,以实现民族人民的精神健康,并将其作为初级保健的一个组成部分。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Culture and Mental Health
International Journal of Culture and Mental Health Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: This title has ceased (2018). This important peer-review journal provides an innovative forum, both international and multidisciplinary, for addressing cross-cultural issues and mental health. Culture as it comes to bear on mental health is a rapidly expanding area of inquiry and research within psychiatry and psychology, and other related fields such as social work, with important implications for practice in the global context. The journal is an essential resource for health care professionals working in the field of cross-cultural mental health.Readership includes psychiatrists, psychologists, medical anthropologists, medical sociologists, psychiatric nurses and social workers, general practitioners and other mental health professionals interested in the area. The International Journal of Culture and Mental Health publishes original empirical research, review papers and theoretical articles in the fields of cross-cultural psychiatry and psychology. Contributions from the fields of medical anthropology and medical sociology are particularly welcome. A continuing dialogue between members of various disciplines in various fields is encouraged. The aim of the journal is to encourage its readers to think about various issues which have clouded cross-cultural development of ideas. The journal lays special emphasis on developing further links between medical anthropology, medical sociology, clinical psychiatry and psychology, and implications of the findings on service provisions. The journal is published four times a year. The style of reference is Harvard. All research articles in this journal, including those in special issues, special sections or supplements, have undergone rigorous peer review, based on initial editor screening and anonymized refereeing by at least two independent referees.
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