Hunter E M
Northside Clinic, Greenwich, NSW.
Med J Aust. 1991;155(11-12):779-83.
Doctors new to Aboriginal Australia are not infrequently surprised that their choice to work with the needy and underprivileged is not cause for unconditional positive regard. The naïveté of this position reflects the assumption that the nature of medical work somehow separates doctors from other less caring Europeans who have intruded into Aboriginal Australia. In this paper the ambivalence with which medical professionals are viewed by Aborigines is explored through an examination of particular historical instances drawn from northern Australia, particularly the Kimberley region of Western Australia. It may be that a willingness to interrogate preconceived notions of privileged access will be in the best interests of the profession, and of doctors choosing to work in Aboriginal Australia.
初到澳大利亚原住民地区工作的医生常常感到惊讶,他们选择为贫困和弱势群体服务,却并未得到无条件的积极认可。这种立场的天真反映出一种假设,即医疗工作的性质在某种程度上使医生有别于其他不那么关心他人、侵入澳大利亚原住民地区的欧洲人。在本文中,通过审视澳大利亚北部、尤其是西澳大利亚金伯利地区的特定历史实例,探讨了原住民对医疗专业人员的矛盾态度。或许,愿意审视享有特权的先入之见,将对该职业以及选择在澳大利亚原住民地区工作的医生最为有利。