加拿大医疗保健中的反土著种族主义:文献综述。

IF 2.7 4区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Martin Cooke, Tasha Shields
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:与其他殖民地国家一样,土著(原住民、因努伊特人和梅蒂斯人)与其他公民之间的健康不平等是加拿大的一项重要政策关切。医疗保健中的种族主义已被确认为导致较差的医疗保健和较差的结果的原因。尽管有大量文献介绍了其他医疗环境中的种族主义,但现有文献中有关加拿大医疗中反土著种族主义的内容并不明确:方法:我们对研究文献中有关医疗保健领域反土著种族主义经历的证据进行了范围界定审查,包括所确定的种族主义行为类型、研究环境以及所包括的土著居民和地理区域。我们在 Scopus、PubMed、CINAHL 和《北美原住民文献目录》(BIPNA)中查找了有关加拿大医疗机构中反原住民种族主义的英语和法语期刊文章以及灰色文献报告。大部分研究采用了对患者进行定性访谈的方法,但也有很大一部分研究包括了医疗服务提供者。大多数研究都是在城市环境中进行的,其中大部分在安大略省或不列颠哥伦比亚省,其中混杂着土著居民。发现的大多数种族主义经历都是 "隐蔽的 "种族主义,包括病人感觉受到了与非土著病人不同的待遇、被忽视、待遇较慢或不被相信。将土著人定型为药物使用者、贫穷的病人或贫穷的父母也是常见的报道。"公开的种族主义",包括使用种族主义的蔑称,并不普遍。一些定量研究确实使用了标准化或经过验证的工具来捕捉种族主义经历,但大多数研究并没有对种族主义的普遍程度做出可推广的估计。少数将种族主义与健康结果联系起来的研究发现,经历种族主义与不愿意寻求医疗保健有关,可能导致更高的未满足医疗保健需求。性别是最能影响医疗保健经历的交叉维度,土著妇女和女孩面临着特定陈规定型观念的风险。一些论文指出,社会经济地位低下的土著人遭受种族主义的风险最高:在加拿大医疗保健领域发现的反土著种族主义类型似乎与其他司法管辖区报告的类型相似。面临多重不利条件,尤其是性别和社会阶层不利条件的原住民可能最有可能遭受种族主义。医疗保健中的种族主义经历很可能会对土著人的健康产生影响,主要是通过减少医疗保健的获取途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Anti-Indigenous racism in Canadian healthcare: a scoping review of the literature.

Health inequity between Indigenous (First Nations, Inuit, and Métis) peoples and other citizens is an important policy concern in Canada, as in other colonial countries. Racism in healthcare has been identified as contributing to poorer care and to worse outcomes. Despite a large literature regarding racism in other healthcare contexts, the dimensions of the existing literature on anti-Indigenous racism in Canadian healthcare are unclear. A scoping review examined the evidence of anti-Indigenous racist experiences in healthcare in the research literature, including the types of racist behaviours identified, settings studied, and Indigenous populations and geographic regions included. We identified English and French language journal articles on anti-Indigenous racism in Canadian healthcare settings in Scopus, PubMed, CINAHL, and the Bibliography of Indigenous Peoples in North America, and grey literature reports. A total of 2250 journal articles and 9 grey literature reports published since 2000 were included in screening, and 66 studies were included in the final review. Most used qualitative interviews with patients, but a large proportion included healthcare providers. Most were conducted in urban settings, a majority in Ontario or British Columbia, with mixed Indigenous populations. The largest proportion focussed on patient experiences with healthcare in general, rather than specific clinical contexts. Most racist experiences identified were 'covert' racism, including patients feeling treated differently from non-Indigenous patients, being ignored, treated more slowly, or not believed. Stereotyping of Indigenous peoples as substance users, poor patients, or poor parents was also commonly reported. 'Overt racism', including the use of racist slurs, was not widely found. Some quantitative studies did use standardized or validated instruments to capture racist experiences, but most did not result in generalizable estimates of their prevalence. The few studies linking racism to health outcomes found that experiencing racism was related to reluctance to seek healthcare, potentially leading to higher unmet healthcare needs. Gender was the intersecting dimension most identified as shaping healthcare experiences, with Indigenous women and girls at risk to specific stereotypes. Some papers suggested that socio-economically disadvantaged Indigenous people were at the highest risk to experiencing racism. Types of anti-Indigenous racism identified in Canadian healthcare appear similar to those reported in other jurisdictions. Indigenous peoples facing multiple dimensions of disadvantage, especially gender and social class, may be the most likely to experience racism. It is likely that the experience of racism in healthcare has implications for Indigenous peoples' health, mainly by reducing healthcare access.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
3.80%
发文量
87
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal for Quality in Health Care makes activities and research related to quality and safety in health care available to a worldwide readership. The Journal publishes papers in all disciplines related to the quality and safety of health care, including health services research, health care evaluation, technology assessment, health economics, utilization review, cost containment, and nursing care research, as well as clinical research related to quality of care. This peer-reviewed journal is truly interdisciplinary and includes contributions from representatives of all health professions such as doctors, nurses, quality assurance professionals, managers, politicians, social workers, and therapists, as well as researchers from health-related backgrounds.
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