Richmond Chantelle A M
Department of Geography, McGill University, 805 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, QC H3A 2K6.
Can J Public Health. 2007 Jul-Aug;98(4):347-51. doi: 10.1007/BF03405416.
Societies that foster high-quality social relationships and social support seemingly produce healthier populations. Existing research identifies social support as a significant dimension and determinant of Canadian Aboriginal health, yet patterns of morbidity and mortality overwhelmingly reflect social causes (e.g., violence, suicide), thereby suggesting that social support may not be widely accessible within this population. This paper seeks to understand how broader societal factors (e.g., colonialism) work to influence access to social support in the everyday social environments of Aboriginal communities.
Narrative analysis of interviews with 26 Aboriginal Community Health Representatives (CHRs) from across Canada.
Sources of social support are institutional (e.g., those employed to provide support) and intimate (e.g., family). In terms of access to social support, CHRs' stories reflected a narrative detailing the post-colonial context. Key elements of this narrative include the child-parent relationship, group-belonging, trust, socio-economic dependence, and the changing nature of help. Findings suggest that features of the broader societal context (e.g., poverty) have manifested as local social conditions (e.g., providing help has come to be seen as a possible source of income), thereby reducing access to social support. Access to this resource is also affected as institutional and intimate supports tend to overlap in Aboriginal communities, many of which are small in terms of size and population.
Research and policy options must recognize the post-colonial influences that affect the everyday realities of Aboriginal communities and study the complex interactions between these influences, and how health determinants--like social support--play out in local places as a result of this legacy.
促进高质量社会关系和社会支持的社会似乎能孕育出更健康的人群。现有研究将社会支持视为加拿大原住民健康的一个重要维度和决定因素,但发病率和死亡率模式却压倒性地反映出社会原因(如暴力、自杀),这表明该人群可能无法广泛获得社会支持。本文旨在了解更广泛的社会因素(如殖民主义)如何在原住民社区的日常社会环境中影响社会支持的获取。
对来自加拿大各地的26名原住民社区健康代表(CHR)的访谈进行叙事分析。
社会支持的来源包括机构性的(如受雇提供支持的那些人)和亲密关系的(如家庭)。在社会支持的获取方面,社区健康代表的故事反映了一个详细描述后殖民背景的叙事。这个叙事的关键要素包括亲子关系、群体归属感、信任、社会经济依赖以及帮助性质的变化。研究结果表明,更广泛社会背景的特征(如贫困)已表现为当地的社会状况(如提供帮助已被视为一种可能的收入来源),从而减少了社会支持的获取。获取这一资源也受到影响,因为在原住民社区,机构性支持和亲密关系支持往往相互重叠,而这些社区中许多在规模和人口方面都很小。
研究和政策选择必须认识到影响原住民社区日常现实的后殖民影响,并研究这些影响之间的复杂相互作用,以及像社会支持这样的健康决定因素如何因这一遗留问题而在当地发挥作用。