澳大利亚帕西菲卡人对心理健康支持的偏好:焦点小组研究

Roman Kingi, W. Erick, V. Nosa, J. Paynter, Debra de Silva
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引用次数: 2

摘要

引言:心理健康是太平洋岛屿社区(帕西菲卡)日益严重的健康问题,尤其是在重新定居到另一个国家的人中。我们探讨了生活在澳大利亚的帕西菲卡人是否认为心理健康服务满足了他们的需求。方法:我们对居住在澳大利亚昆士兰的183名成年人进行了8个两小时的焦点小组。有来自下列族裔群体的代表:库克群岛、斐济、毛利、纽埃、巴布亚新几内亚、萨摩亚、托克劳和汤加。我们还包括心理健康提供者。我们使用主题分析对反馈进行了分析。调查结果:帕西菲卡人欢迎有机会公开讨论心理健康问题。他们说,经济问题、社会孤立、文化差异、羞耻感和药物使用导致澳大利亚帕西菲卡社区的心理健康状况越来越差。他们希望与主流服务机构合作,开发适合文化的、引人入胜的模式,以支持心理健康。他们建议有机会利用教堂、社区团体、学校、社交媒体和广播来提高人们对心理健康的认识。结论:与帕西菲卡社区合作可以加强主流心理健康服务,减轻澳大利亚急性服务的负担。这可能包括收集更好的种族数据以帮助规划服务,赋予社区结构以促进心理健康,并培训工作人员以支持帕西菲卡社区。关键信息是,服务可以与帕西菲卡社区合作,而不是与他们合作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pasifika preferences for mental health support in Australia: focus group study
Introduction: Mental wellbeing is a growing health issue for Pacific Islands communities (Pasifika), particularly amongst people who have resettled in a different country. We explored whether Pasifika people living in Australia think mental health services meet their needs. Methods: We ran eight two-hour focus groups with 183 adults living in Queensland, Australia. There were representatives from the following ethnic groups: Cook Islands, Fiji, Maori, Niue, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Tokelau and Tonga. We also included mental health providers. We analysed the feedback using thematic analysis. Findings: Pasifika people welcomed having an opportunity to discuss mental wellbeing openly. They said that economic issues, social isolation, cultural differences, shame and substance use contributed to increasingly poor mental health amongst Pasifika communities in Australia. They wanted to work with mainstream services to develop culturally appropriate and engaging models to support mental wellbeing. They suggested opportunities to harness churches, community groups, schools, social media and radio to raise awareness about mental health.  Conclusions: Working in partnership with Pasifika communities could strengthen mainstream mental health services and reduce the burden on acute services in Australia. This could include collecting better ethnicity data to help plan services, empowering community structures to promote mental wellbeing and training staff to support Pasifika communities. The key message was that services can work ‘with’ Pasifika communities, not ‘to’ them.
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