为第一民族儿童和青少年共同创造更好的医疗保健体验:第一种方法来自两只眼睛的观察

M. Latimer, J. Sylliboy, J. Francis, Sharon Amey, S. Rudderham, G. Finley, E. MacLeod, K. Paul
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引用次数: 12

摘要

为了获得健康,土著居民寻求一种平衡心理、精神、情感和身体健康的生活,但这四个维度的范围在西方的卫生系统中通常没有被考虑到。由于殖民遗产在当今的政策和护理环境中持续存在,土著人民在所有这些方面都经历着持续的痛苦和伤害。探索如何支持土著人民接受健康和减轻慢性疼痛的方式一直不是卫生研究的优先领域。这项以社区为基础的定性研究在四个原住民社区进行,与188名原住民儿童、青少年、父母和老人以及32名在这些社区工作的专业人士进行了对话。目的是收集与疼痛表达、护理经验和改善医疗保健遭遇的策略相关的观点。主题分析用于确定临床医生在原住民寻求护理时考虑的更具文化思想的方法。由四个迭代步骤组成的“双眼观察”被用于共同创建FIRST方法,以验证社区成员的观点是否被听取,并为儿童、青少年和家庭的文化安全实践提供临床方法。结果中的一个首要主题是更清楚地了解疼痛和伤害如何转化为参与者的健康经历,以及他们希望自己的知识反映在他们的医疗保健中。参与者从历史、文化和精神身份以及社区、家庭和个人的角度描述了在健康的所有四个方面经历的疼痛和伤害。第一种方法捕获了与家庭、信息、关系、安全空间和双眼治疗相关的土著知识。在临床实践中考虑这种方法可以增强尊重和信任关系,知识交流以获得更好的护理体验,并可能改善土著人民的文化敏感结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Co‐creating better healthcare experiences for First Nations children and youth: The FIRST approach emerges from Two‐Eyed seeing
To achieve health, Indigenous people seek a life that balances mental, spiritual, emotional, and physical wellness, yet the scope of these four dimensions is not typically considered in the Western‐based health system. Indigenous people experience ongoing pain and hurt in all these dimensions as a result of a colonial legacy that persists in current‐day policy and care contexts. Exploring ways to support Indigenous people to embrace ways of being well and reducing chronic pain has not been a priority area in health research. This community‐based, qualitative study in four First Nations communities involved conversation sessions with 188 First Nations children, youth, parents, and Elders and 32 professionals who practice in those communities. The purpose was to gather perspectives related to pain expression, care experiences, and the strategies to improve the healthcare encounter. Thematic analysis was used to identify a more culturally thoughtful approach for clinicians to consider when First Nations people seek care. Two‐Eyed Seeing consisting of four iterative steps was used to co‐create the FIRST approach validating for community members that their perspectives were heard and providing a clinical approach for culturally safe practices with children, youth, and families. An overarching theme in the results was a clearer understanding about how pain and hurt translate into participants' health experiences and their desire to have their knowledge reflected in their health care. Participants describe experiencing pain and hurt in all four dimensions of health and from a historical, cultural, and spiritual identity, as well as from a community, family, and individual perspective. The FIRST approach captures Indigenous knowledge relating to Family, Information, Relationship, Safe‐Space, and Two‐Eyed treatment in the healthcare encounter. Considerations of this approach in clinical practice could enhance respectful and trusting relationships, knowledge exchange for better care experiences, and potentially improvement of culturally sensitive outcomes for Indigenous people.
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