Deborah Magee, Marguerite Bramble, Holly Randell-Moon, Jola Stewart-Bugg, Julian Grant
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Recent policy changes in Australia have required health professionals to integrate cultural safety into their practice to mitigate racism and improve the health of older First Nations Australians and older people from diverse ethnic and cultural groups.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>This review consisted of literature published in English from 1990, including published primary studies; systematic, integrative and narrative reviews; meta-analyses; theses; policy documents; guidelines; position statements; and government literature. Ovid (MEDLINE), CINAHL Plus with Full Text, Scopus, Proquest Nursing and Allied Health Database, and Informit were used in the full search. The most recent search of all databases was undertaken on 9 May 2022. Ten papers were included in the review, following the exclusion of 376 papers. A title and abstract search of the reference lists of papers included in the review identified no additional papers.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Ten papers were included in the review from Australia, Canada, the US, Norway and England. The literature reviewed suggests that health professionals in the aged care sector in regional, rural and remote areas in Australia, Canada, the US, Norway and England use alternative terms to 'racism' and 'racist', such as 'institutional marginalisation'.</p><p><strong>Discussion: </strong>The absence of explicit reference to racism aligns with critical race research that argues implicit bias and institutional racism are often separated from an individualised understanding of racism. That is, practitioners may understand racism as something that is perpetrated by individuals in an otherwise 'neutral' health setting. There is also a lack of clarity on how culturally safe care is understood, even though individual care plans are viewed as instrumental in establishing the needs and preferences of the consumers. Within the literature surveyed, barriers to providing quality and culturally inclusive care include disengaged management, insufficient human and material resources, language barriers and a lack of education focused on the needs of older individuals and groups with various cultural and spiritual needs. Additionally, the review does not clearly illuminate what health professionals understand to be racist thinking or behaviour and how it is responded to in practice. Likewise, there is limited information about health professionals' understanding of cultural safety and how to provide culturally inclusive care.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>While work is beginning on developing standards for cultural safety training in an Australian context, there are also opportunities to consider how these should be applied or adapted to residential and community aged care to best meet the needs of a diverse consumer base and workforce.</p>","PeriodicalId":21460,"journal":{"name":"Rural and remote health","volume":"24 1","pages":"8045"},"PeriodicalIF":2.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Understanding and responding to racism and the provision of culturally safe care by interdisciplinary health professionals in the aged care sector in regional, rural and remote areas: a scoping review.\",\"authors\":\"Deborah Magee, Marguerite Bramble, Holly Randell-Moon, Jola Stewart-Bugg, Julian Grant\",\"doi\":\"10.22605/RRH8045\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Introduction: </strong>This scoping review was undertaken to obtain conceptual clarification about how racism and cultural safety are understood by interdisciplinary health professionals globally in the aged care sector in regional, rural and remote areas. There is evidence in Australia and internationally that racism is a factor impacting significantly on the health of First Peoples and other racialised minorities. Recent policy changes in Australia have required health professionals to integrate cultural safety into their practice to mitigate racism and improve the health of older First Nations Australians and older people from diverse ethnic and cultural groups.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>This review consisted of literature published in English from 1990, including published primary studies; systematic, integrative and narrative reviews; meta-analyses; theses; policy documents; guidelines; position statements; and government literature. Ovid (MEDLINE), CINAHL Plus with Full Text, Scopus, Proquest Nursing and Allied Health Database, and Informit were used in the full search. The most recent search of all databases was undertaken on 9 May 2022. Ten papers were included in the review, following the exclusion of 376 papers. A title and abstract search of the reference lists of papers included in the review identified no additional papers.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Ten papers were included in the review from Australia, Canada, the US, Norway and England. The literature reviewed suggests that health professionals in the aged care sector in regional, rural and remote areas in Australia, Canada, the US, Norway and England use alternative terms to 'racism' and 'racist', such as 'institutional marginalisation'.</p><p><strong>Discussion: </strong>The absence of explicit reference to racism aligns with critical race research that argues implicit bias and institutional racism are often separated from an individualised understanding of racism. That is, practitioners may understand racism as something that is perpetrated by individuals in an otherwise 'neutral' health setting. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
简介本次范围界定审查旨在从概念上澄清全球区域、农村和偏远地区老年护理部门的跨学科卫生专业人员是如何理解种族主义和文化安全的。澳大利亚和国际上都有证据表明,种族主义是严重影响原住民和其他少数民族健康的一个因素。澳大利亚最近的政策变化要求医疗专业人员将文化安全融入到他们的实践中,以减轻种族主义并改善澳大利亚原住民老年人以及来自不同种族和文化群体的老年人的健康状况:本综述包括 1990 年以来发表的英文文献,其中包括已发表的主要研究;系统性、综合性和叙述性综述;荟萃分析;论文;政策文件;指南;立场声明;以及政府文献。全面检索使用了 Ovid (MEDLINE)、CINAHL Plus with Full Text、Scopus、Proquest Nursing and Allied Health Database 和 Informit。对所有数据库的最新检索是在 2022 年 5 月 9 日进行的。在排除 376 篇论文后,有 10 篇论文被纳入综述。对纳入综述的论文参考文献目录进行了标题和摘要检索,未发现其他论文:共有 10 篇来自澳大利亚、加拿大、美国、挪威和英国的论文被纳入综述。综述的文献表明,在澳大利亚、加拿大、美国、挪威和英国的地区、农村和偏远地区,养老护理部门的卫生专业人员使用 "种族主义 "和 "种族歧视 "的替代术语,如 "机构边缘化":没有明确提及种族主义与批判性种族研究的观点一致,即隐性偏见和制度性种族主义往往与对种族主义的个人化理解相分离。也就是说,从业人员可能会将种族主义理解为个人在 "中立 "的医疗环境中实施的行为。尽管个人护理计划被认为有助于确定消费者的需求和偏好,但对于如何理解文化安全护理也缺乏清晰的认识。在所调查的文献中,提供高质量和文化包容性护理的障碍包括管理层不参与、人力和物力资源不足、语言障碍以及缺乏针对具有各种文化和精神需求的老年人和群体的教育。此外,审查没有明确说明卫生专业人员对种族主义思想或行为的理解,以及在实践中是如何应对的。同样,关于卫生专业人员对文化安全的理解以及如何提供文化包容性护理的信息也很有限:结论:澳大利亚正在着手制定文化安全培训标准,同时也有机会考虑如何将这些标准应用或调整到养老院和社区养老护理中,以最大限度地满足多样化的消费者群体和劳动力的需求。
Understanding and responding to racism and the provision of culturally safe care by interdisciplinary health professionals in the aged care sector in regional, rural and remote areas: a scoping review.
Introduction: This scoping review was undertaken to obtain conceptual clarification about how racism and cultural safety are understood by interdisciplinary health professionals globally in the aged care sector in regional, rural and remote areas. There is evidence in Australia and internationally that racism is a factor impacting significantly on the health of First Peoples and other racialised minorities. Recent policy changes in Australia have required health professionals to integrate cultural safety into their practice to mitigate racism and improve the health of older First Nations Australians and older people from diverse ethnic and cultural groups.
Methods: This review consisted of literature published in English from 1990, including published primary studies; systematic, integrative and narrative reviews; meta-analyses; theses; policy documents; guidelines; position statements; and government literature. Ovid (MEDLINE), CINAHL Plus with Full Text, Scopus, Proquest Nursing and Allied Health Database, and Informit were used in the full search. The most recent search of all databases was undertaken on 9 May 2022. Ten papers were included in the review, following the exclusion of 376 papers. A title and abstract search of the reference lists of papers included in the review identified no additional papers.
Results: Ten papers were included in the review from Australia, Canada, the US, Norway and England. The literature reviewed suggests that health professionals in the aged care sector in regional, rural and remote areas in Australia, Canada, the US, Norway and England use alternative terms to 'racism' and 'racist', such as 'institutional marginalisation'.
Discussion: The absence of explicit reference to racism aligns with critical race research that argues implicit bias and institutional racism are often separated from an individualised understanding of racism. That is, practitioners may understand racism as something that is perpetrated by individuals in an otherwise 'neutral' health setting. There is also a lack of clarity on how culturally safe care is understood, even though individual care plans are viewed as instrumental in establishing the needs and preferences of the consumers. Within the literature surveyed, barriers to providing quality and culturally inclusive care include disengaged management, insufficient human and material resources, language barriers and a lack of education focused on the needs of older individuals and groups with various cultural and spiritual needs. Additionally, the review does not clearly illuminate what health professionals understand to be racist thinking or behaviour and how it is responded to in practice. Likewise, there is limited information about health professionals' understanding of cultural safety and how to provide culturally inclusive care.
Conclusion: While work is beginning on developing standards for cultural safety training in an Australian context, there are also opportunities to consider how these should be applied or adapted to residential and community aged care to best meet the needs of a diverse consumer base and workforce.
期刊介绍:
Rural and Remote Health is a not-for-profit, online-only, peer-reviewed academic publication. It aims to further rural and remote health education, research and practice. The primary purpose of the Journal is to publish and so provide an international knowledge-base of peer-reviewed material from rural health practitioners (medical, nursing and allied health professionals and health workers), educators, researchers and policy makers.