Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 7 de 7
Filtrar
Mais filtros

Bases de dados
País/Região como assunto
Tipo de documento
País de afiliação
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34444453

RESUMO

This paper outlines the development of Indigenist Health Humanities as a new and innovative field of research building an intellectual collective capable of bridging the knowledge gap that hinders current efforts to close the gap in Indigenous health inequality. Bringing together health and the humanities through the particularity of Indigenous scholarship, a deeper understanding of the human experience of health will be developed alongside a greater understanding of the enablers to building a transdisciplinary collective of Indigenist researchers. The potential benefits include a more sustainable, relational, and ethical approach to advancing new knowledge, and health outcomes, for Indigenous people in its fullest sense.


Assuntos
Disparidades nos Níveis de Saúde , Ciências Humanas , Humanos , Conhecimento , Pesquisadores
2.
Global Health ; 17(1): 87, 2021 07 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34321015

RESUMO

International evidence suggests migrants experience inequitable access, outcomes and treatment quality across the cancer care continuum. There is currently limited research assessing equity across the cancer care continuum for culturally and linguistically diverse migrants living in Australia. A detailed protocol and search strategy were developed and used to identify all relevant literature, utilising the Joanna Briggs Institute Reviewer's Manual. Systematic searching was conducted via multiple databases and identified studies were screened against pre-identified inclusion and exclusion criteria. 71 studies met the inclusion criteria for analysis. Most studies examined cancer detection via screening. Very few studies examined cancer prevention, diagnosis, treatment or palliative care. Most studies focused on patient-sided barriers to care and there was a paucity of information regarding institutional barriers to health. Cancer-related outcomes were seldom examined, and most studies were qualitative or behavioral analysis. Results highlighted significant communication issues spanning the cancer care continuum and a context of inadequate support for both patients and clinicians. There is a demonstrable need to examine equity in access and outcomes for culturally and linguistically diverse cancer populations. This requires the identification of cancer-related disparities and an examination of institutional barriers to care. Through addressing this dearth of information, future research and health policy can support the operationalisation of health equity.


Assuntos
Neoplasias , Migrantes , Austrália , Continuidade da Assistência ao Paciente , Atenção à Saúde , Humanos , Neoplasias/terapia , Grupos Populacionais
3.
Aust N Z J Public Health ; 44(2): 102-105, 2020 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31914233

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: To understand strengths-based practice as articulated by urban Indigenous community workers and to consider its application for public health approaches to Australian Indigenous health advancement. METHODS: Semi-structured interviews with community workers from an urban Indigenous community. Interviews were video and audio recorded and transcribed verbatim. Data were analysed using thematic analysis, using an Indigenist research framework. RESULTS: For our participants (11 Indigenous and one non-Indigenous), a strengths-based approach was fundamental to their practice. This approach reconfigured the usual relationship of client and service provider to fellow community member. They understood the strength of Indigeneity that empowers individuals and communities. They were not blinkered to the challenges in the community but resisted defining themselves, their community or their community practice by these deficits. CONCLUSIONS: Our participants had a sophisticated experiential understanding that a strengths-based practice is not simply a 'culturally acceptable' way for non-Indigenous peoples to work for Indigenous peoples, but rather it is the only way of working with Indigenous people. Implications for public health: Strengths-based practice requires a reconfiguring of relationships of power, of attending to structure over stereotypes, and privileging Indigenous ways of knowing, being and doing. This reconfiguration is an ethical prerequisite for an approach that is genuinely strengths-based.


Assuntos
Serviços de Saúde Comunitária/organização & administração , Agentes Comunitários de Saúde/psicologia , Acessibilidade aos Serviços de Saúde/estatística & dados numéricos , Serviços de Saúde do Indígena/estatística & dados numéricos , Havaiano Nativo ou Outro Ilhéu do Pacífico/psicologia , Havaiano Nativo ou Outro Ilhéu do Pacífico/estatística & dados numéricos , Relações Profissional-Paciente , Adulto , Austrália , Criança , Feminino , Serviços de Saúde do Indígena/organização & administração , Humanos , Entrevistas como Assunto , Masculino , Pesquisa Qualitativa , População Urbana
4.
Aust J Prim Health ; 25(5): 389-394, 2019 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31619320

RESUMO

A central strategy in addressing health disparities experienced by Indigenous people has been based on a concern with workforce improvement. In this paper, the Indigenous Australian healthcare workforce literature since 1977 is reviewed and its scope of concern, as being often limited to questions of 'supply', is critiqued. The pipeline metaphor, whether used explicitly or implied, regularly focuses attention on closing the gap on Indigenous representation within the health workforce. The exception though is the discourse concerning Indigenous Health Workers (IHWs), where questions concerning the legitimacy of the role continue to abound within a workforce hierarchy where community knowledge, though shown to be crucial to culturally safe health service provision, is trumped by the other health professions whose knowledges and legitimacy are not in question. This contrast exemplifies the need to examine the working of power not just 'supply'. The pipeline metaphor is disrupted with concerns about a range of other 'gaps' - gaps in the recognition of Indigenous knowledges, in organisational structures, in governance and in self-awareness by the health professions of their whiteness. As the health system continues to measure workforce development in terms of pipeline capacity, our study questions what happens beyond the pipeline.


Assuntos
Mão de Obra em Saúde , Havaiano Nativo ou Outro Ilhéu do Pacífico , Atenção Primária à Saúde , Austrália , Mão de Obra em Saúde/organização & administração , Disparidades em Assistência à Saúde , Humanos , Havaiano Nativo ou Outro Ilhéu do Pacífico/educação , Atenção Primária à Saúde/organização & administração
5.
Health Promot Int ; 33(5): 770-780, 2018 Oct 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28387801

RESUMO

The potential for health promotion through social networking sites (SNSs) is widely recognized. However, while health promotion prides itself in focusing on the social determinants of health, its partiality for persuading individuals to comply with health behaviours dominates the way health promotion utilizes SNSs. This paper contributes to an understanding of collaborative ways SNSs can work for health promotion agendas of self-determination and empowerment in an Indigenous Australia context. An ethnographic study was undertaken with Deadly Choices, an Indigenous-led health promotion initiative. The study involved participant observation of interactions on Deadly Choices SNSs between Deadly Choices and its online community members. Deadly Choices provides an example of SNSs providing a powerful tool to create a safe, inclusive and positive space for Indigenous people and communities to profile their healthy choices, according to Indigenous notions of health and identity. The study found five principles that underpin Deadly Choices' use of SNSs for health promotion. These are: create a dialogue; build community online and offline; incentivise healthy online engagement; celebrate Indigenous identity and culture; and prioritize partnerships. Deadly Choices SNSs empowers Indigenous people and communities to be health promoters themselves, which represents a power shift from health promotion practitioner to Indigenous people and communities and more broadly, an enactment of Indigenous self-determination on SNSs. Mainstream health promotion can learn from Indigenous health promotion practice regarding the use of SNSs for health promotion agendas.


Assuntos
Promoção da Saúde/métodos , Havaiano Nativo ou Outro Ilhéu do Pacífico , Redes Sociais Online , Poder Psicológico , Antropologia Cultural , Austrália , Serviços de Saúde do Indígena , Humanos , Grupos Populacionais
6.
Health Promot J Austr ; 26(3): 195-199, 2015 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26599355

RESUMO

Health promotion aspires to work in empowering, participatory ways, with the goal of supporting people to increase control over their health. However, buried in this goal is an ethical tension: while increasing people's autonomy, health promotion also imposes a particular, health promotion-sanctioned version of what is good. This tension positions practitioners precariously, where the ethos of empowerment risks increasing health promotion's paternalistic control over people, rather than people's control over their own health. Herein we argue that this ethical tension is amplified in Indigenous Australia, where colonial processes of control over Indigenous lands, lives and cultures are indistinguishable from contemporary health promotion 'interventions'. Moreover, the potential stigmatisation produced in any paternalistic acts 'done for their own good' cannot be assumed to have evaporated within the self-proclaimed 'empowering' narratives of health promotion. This issue's guest editor's call for health promotion to engage 'with politics and with philosophical ideas about the state and the citizen' is particularly relevant in an Indigenous Australian context. Indigenous Australians continue to experience health promotion as a moral project of control through intervention, which contradicts health promotion's central goal of empowerment. Therefore, Indigenous health promotion is an invaluable site for discussion and analysis of health promotion's broader ethical tensions. Given the persistent and alarming Indigenous health inequalities, this paper calls for systematic ethical reflection in order to redress health promotion's general failure to reduce health inequalities experienced by Indigenous Australians.


Assuntos
Assistência à Saúde Culturalmente Competente/ética , Promoção da Saúde/ética , Serviços de Saúde do Indígena/ética , Austrália , Humanos , Havaiano Nativo ou Outro Ilhéu do Pacífico , Paternalismo , Autonomia Pessoal , Grupos Populacionais , Poder Psicológico
7.
Glob Health Promot ; 20(2): 22-9, 2013 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23797937

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: The Ottawa Charter is undeniably of pivotal importance in the history of ideas associated with the establishment of health promotion. There is much to applaud in a charter which responds to the need to take action on the social and economic determinants of health and which seeks to empower communities to be at the centre of this. Such accolades tend to position the Ottawa Charter as 'beyond critique'; a taken-for-granted 'given' in the history of health promotion. In contrast, we argue it is imperative to critically reflect on its 'manufacture' and assess the possibility that certain voices have been privileged, and others marginalized. METHODS: This paper re-examines the 1986 Ottawa Conference including its background papers from a postcolonial standpoint. We use critical discourse analysis as a tool to identify the enactment of power within the production of the Ottawa health promotion discourse. This exercise draws attention to both the power to ensure the dominant presence of privileged voices at the conference as well as the discursive strategies deployed to 'naturalize' the social order of inequality. RESULTS: Our analysis shows that the discourse informing the development of the Ottawa Charter strongly reflected Western/colonizer centric worldviews, and actively silenced the possibility of countervailing Indigenous and developing country voices. CONCLUSION: The Ottawa Charter espouses principles of participation, empowerment and social justice. We question then whether the genesis of the Ottawa Charter lives up to its own principles of practice. We conclude that reflexive practice is crucial to health promotion, which ought to include a preparedness for health promotion to more critically acknowledge its own history.


Assuntos
Atitude Frente a Saúde/etnologia , Promoção da Saúde/organização & administração , Poder Psicológico , Justiça Social/normas , Colonialismo , Congressos como Assunto , Promoção da Saúde/métodos , Promoção da Saúde/tendências , Humanos , Ontário , Ocidente
SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA