Thompson Sandra C, Digiacomo Michelle L, Smith Julie S, Taylor Kate P, Dimer Lyn, Ali Mohammed, Wood Marianne M, Leahy Timothy G, Davidson Patricia M
Centre for International Health, Curtin University of Technology, Bentley Campus, Perth, Western Australia 6102, Australia.
Aust New Zealand Health Policy. 2009 Dec 30;6:29. doi: 10.1186/1743-8462-6-29.
Cardiovascular disease is the major cause of premature death of Indigenous Australians, and despite evidence that cardiac rehabilitation (CR) and secondary prevention can reduce recurrent disease and deaths, CR uptake is suboptimal. The National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) guidelines Strengthening Cardiac Rehabilitation and Secondary Prevention for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, published in 2005, provide checklists for services to assist them to reduce the service gap for Indigenous people. This study describes health professionals' awareness, implementation, and perspectives of barriers to implementation of these guidelines based on semi-structured interviews conducted between November 2007 and June 2008 with health professionals involved in CR within mainstream health services in Western Australia (WA). Twenty-four health professionals from 17 services (10 rural, 7 metropolitan) listed in the WA Directory of CR services were interviewed.
The majority of respondents reported that they were unfamiliar with the NHMRC guidelines and as a consequence implementation of the recommendations was minimal and inconsistently applied. Respondents reported that they provided few in-patient CR-related services to Indigenous patients, services upon discharge were erratic, and they had few Indigenous-specific resources for patients. Issues relating to workforce, cultural competence, and service linkages emerged as having most impact on design and delivery of CR services for Indigenous people in WA.
This study has demonstrated limited awareness and poor implementation in WA of the recommendations of the NHMRC Strengthening Cardiac Rehabilitation and Secondary Prevention for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples: A Guide for Health Professionals. The disproportionate burden of CVD morbidity and mortality among Indigenous Australians mandates urgent attention to this problem and alternative approaches to CR delivery. Dedicated resources and alternative approaches to CR delivery for Indigenous Australians are needed.
心血管疾病是澳大利亚原住民过早死亡的主要原因,尽管有证据表明心脏康复(CR)和二级预防可以减少疾病复发和死亡,但CR的利用率并不理想。2005年发布的澳大利亚国家卫生与医学研究委员会(NHMRC)指南《加强原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民的心脏康复和二级预防》为服务提供了清单,以帮助缩小原住民的服务差距。本研究基于2007年11月至2008年6月期间对西澳大利亚州(WA)主流卫生服务机构中参与CR的卫生专业人员进行的半结构化访谈,描述了卫生专业人员对这些指南的认识、实施情况以及实施障碍的看法。对WA心脏康复服务目录中列出的17个服务机构(10个农村机构、7个城市机构)的24名卫生专业人员进行了访谈。
大多数受访者表示他们不熟悉NHMRC指南,因此建议的实施很少且应用不一致。受访者表示,他们为原住民患者提供的住院CR相关服务很少,出院后的服务不稳定,并且他们几乎没有针对原住民的患者资源。与劳动力、文化能力和服务联系相关的问题对WA原住民CR服务的设计和提供影响最大。
本研究表明,WA对NHMRC《加强原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民的心脏康复和二级预防:卫生专业人员指南》建议的认识有限且实施不佳。澳大利亚原住民中心血管疾病发病率和死亡率的不成比例负担要求迫切关注这一问题以及CR服务提供的替代方法。需要为澳大利亚原住民提供专门的资源和CR服务提供的替代方法。