本土力量:编织文化、仪式和社区以应对COVID-19大流行

IF 1.2 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Autumn Watson, Eva Purkey, C. Davison, Minnie Fu, Dionne Nolan, D. Mitchell, Jennifer Kehoe, Sheldon Traviss, I. Bayoumi
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引用次数: 3

摘要

目的:2019冠状病毒病大流行影响了城市土著人民的身体、心理、情感和精神健康。我们试图检查社区中土著服务提供者在服务提供方面的创新和变化,他们基于土著世界观解决社区需求。基本程序:该研究是一个学术团队、一名土著研究助理和一个土著监督委员会之间的合作。与土著服务组织、有土著方案的非土著组织、土著志愿人员组织和土著志愿人员进行了15次深入访谈。招募参与者的依据是其任务侧重于精神和情感健康、教育、慢性健康状况、妇女和儿童以及土著文化需求。主要发现:大流行病期间,城市土著人民的卫生不平等现象更加严重。由于缺乏地方基础设施,提供和改善获得服务的志愿精神有所增加。服务中断和访问障碍引发了创新规划和基于优势的应对措施,这些活动嵌入在土地上,与语言、仪式和文化交织在一起。确定了未满足的社区服务需求和能力发展优先事项。结论:获得土地、基础设施和文化规划是城市土著社区整体健康的关键。尽管不平等现象依然存在,但以城市为基础的土著应对措施体现了以优势为基础的方法,有助于应对大流行病的影响,并展示了土著的认识方式如何在文化、仪式和为社区创造空间的基础上增强力量,促进创新的方案调整。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Indigenous Strength: Braiding Culture, Ceremony and Community as a response to the COVID-19 Pandemic
Purpose: The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted the physical, mental, emotional and spiritual health of urban Indigenous Peoples. We sought to examine innovations and changes in service delivery by Indigenous service providers in the community who are addressing community needs based on an Indigenous worldview. Basic Procedures: The research was a collaboration between an academic team, an Indigenous research associate, and an Indigenous oversight committee. Fifteen in-depth interviews were conducted with Indigenous service organizations, non-Indigenous organizations with Indigenous programming, Indigenous volunteer-based organizations and Indigenous volunteers. Participants were recruited based on having mandates that focussed on mental and emotional wellbeing, education, chronic health conditions, women and children and Indigenous cultural needs. Major Findings: Health inequities for urban Indigenous Peoples were compounded during the pandemic. The lack of local infrastructure contributed to increased volunteerism to deliver and improve access to services. Service interruptions and access barriers triggered innovative programming and a strengths-based response with activities embedded on the land, braided with language, ceremony and culture. Unmet community service needs and capacity development priorities were identified. Conclusions: Access to land, infrastructure and cultural programming is key to wholistic health for the urban Indigenous community. Despite continued inequities, the urban-based Indigenous response exemplifies the strengths-based approaches that helped to address pandemic impacts and demonstrated how Indigenous ways of knowing build strength and foster innovative program adaptations based on culture, ceremony and creating space for community.
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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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