Department of Physical Therapy, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Womens Health Issues. 2012 Jan-Feb;22(1):e111-8. doi: 10.1016/j.whi.2011.07.011. Epub 2011 Oct 2.
The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and other international human rights conventions guarantee the fundamental human rights to physical, social, and psychological health. The purpose of this study was to examine whether these rights are being upheld in Canada for disabled women.
An interpretive, qualitative, focus group design was employed. Participants were women 18 to 67 years of age with a self-identified physical, sensory, cognitive, and/or psychiatric impairment. Eleven focus groups were conducted with 74 disabled women from urban and rural settings in Northern Ontario, Manitoba, and Nova Scotia. The data were analyzed for themes using a flexible coding system derived from and consistent with the research objectives and the study's human rights framework.
Participants described multiple intersecting factors that impeded or facilitated access to health care. Services included both generic health services and impairment-specific services. Participants experienced a number of barriers accessing professionals, support programs, and services. These are described under three broad themes: 1) Labyrinthine health service 'systems,' 2) assumptions, attitudes, and discriminatory practices, and 3) inadequate sexual health or reproductive services and supports.
The results suggest that Canada falls significantly short of guaranteeing disabled women's human rights to access health care supports and services. Access barriers resulted from the inefficiencies and complexities of the multiple agencies and programs that disabled women had to navigate, difficulties accessing information on available services, and negative attitudes of some health and social service providers.
《联合国残疾人权利公约》和其他国际人权公约保障残疾人在身体、社会和心理健康方面的基本人权。本研究旨在探讨加拿大是否为残疾妇女维护了这些权利。
采用解释性、定性、焦点小组设计。参与者为年龄在 18 至 67 岁之间、自我认定有身体、感官、认知和/或精神障碍的女性。在安大略省北部、曼尼托巴省和新斯科舍省的城市和农村地区,共进行了 11 次焦点小组,共有 74 名残疾妇女参加。使用源自研究目标和人权框架并与之一致的灵活编码系统对数据进行主题分析。
参与者描述了多种阻碍或促进获得医疗保健的相互交织的因素。服务包括一般健康服务和特定于障碍的服务。参与者在获得专业人员、支持计划和服务方面遇到了许多障碍。这些障碍在三个广泛的主题下进行了描述:1)迷宫般的卫生服务“系统”;2)假设、态度和歧视性做法;3)性健康或生殖服务和支持不足。
结果表明,加拿大在保障残疾妇女获得医疗保健支持和服务的人权方面存在显著差距。获得障碍源于残疾妇女必须应对的多个机构和计划的效率低下和复杂性、获取有关可用服务信息的困难以及一些卫生和社会服务提供者的负面态度。