从政策和规划到实践:将性健康列入西澳大利亚土著社区的议程。

Sandra C Thompson, Heath S Greville, Rani Param
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:澳大利亚土著居民在一系列卫生、教育和社会经济措施方面的地位明显较差,历届澳大利亚州和联邦政府都致力于消除这些差距。尽管如此,土著居民健康状况的改善幅度不大,与新西兰、加拿大和美利坚合众国等同样经历过殖民统治和剥夺土著人口历史的国家相比,澳大利亚土著人民的健康差距要大得多。政策和规划方面的努力最终必须转化为实际的战略。这篇文章概述了在西澳大利亚提高土著人民对性传播感染率高和性健康问题的参与和关注的有效办法。该方法的许多方面与其他健康问题有关。结果:土著人性健康的复杂性需要机构间和政府间的合作,以及土著人的领导、准确的数据和社区的支持。本文描述了一种涵盖所有这些领域的最新方法。这导致土著保健机构比以往更积极地讨论土著性健康问题,土著性健康方面有了更多资源,不同保健服务提供者和部门之间有了更好的沟通和伙伴关系。在能力建设、协作和社区参与方面的宝贵经验很容易转移到其他健康问题上,并且可能对在具有挑战性的土著健康领域工作的其他保健专业人员有用。结论:保健服务规划人员和提供者努力实现土著居民对其特殊保健问题的所有权和领导权,尽管他们真诚地关注并承诺解决土著居民的保健问题。这凸显了确保土著居民真正参与的必要性。建设使土著人民和社区能够实现自己目标的能力是一项长期战略,需要持续的承诺,但我们认为这是改善土著健康成果的先决条件。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Beyond policy and planning to practice: getting sexual health on the agenda in Aboriginal communities in Western Australia.

Background: Indigenous Australians have significantly poorer status on a large range of health, educational and socioeconomic measures and successive Australian governments at state and federal level have committed to redressing these disparities. Despite this, improvements in Aboriginal health status have been modest, and Australia has much greater disparities in the health of its Indigenous people compared to countries that share a history characterised by colonisation and the dispossession of indigenous populations such as New Zealand, Canada and the United States of America. Efforts at policy and planning must ultimately be translated into practical strategies. This article outlines an approach that was effective in Western Australia in increasing the engagement and concern of Aboriginal people about high rates of sexually transmissible infections and sexual health issues. Many aspects of the approach are relevant for other health issues.

Results: The complexity of Indigenous sexual health necessitates inter-agency and cross-governmental collaboration, in addition to Aboriginal leadership, accurate data, and community support. A recent approach covering all these areas is described. This has resulted in Aboriginal sexual health being more actively discussed within Aboriginal health settings than it once was and additional resources for Indigenous sexual health being available, with better communication and partnership across different health service providers and sectors. The valuable lessons in capacity building, collaboration and community engagement are readily transferable to other health issues, and may be useful for other health professionals working in the challenging area of Aboriginal health.

Conclusion: Health service planners and providers grapple with achieving Aboriginal ownership and leadership regarding their particular health issue, despite sincere concern and commitment to addressing Aboriginal health issues. This highlights the need to secure genuine Aboriginal engagement. Building capacity that enables Indigenous people and communities to fulfill their own goals is a long-term strategy and requires sustained commitment, but we argue is a prerequisite for better Indigenous health outcomes.

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