Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, 30 Bond Street, Toronto, ON M5B 1M8, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2011 Oct 21;11:283. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-11-283.
Aboriginal peoples globally, and First Nations peoples in Canada particularly, suffer from high rates of type 2 diabetes and related complications compared with the general population. Research into the unique barriers faced by healthcare providers working in on-reserve First Nations communities is essential for developing effective quality improvement strategies.
In Phase I of this two-phased study, semi-structured interviews and focus groups were held with 24 healthcare providers in the Sioux Lookout Zone in north-western Ontario. A follow-up survey was conducted in Phase II as part of a larger project, the Canadian First Nations Diabetes Clinical Management and Epidemiologic (CIRCLE) study. The survey was completed with 244 healthcare providers in 19 First Nations communities in 7 Canadian provinces, representing three isolation levels (isolated, semi-isolated, non-isolated). Interviews, focus groups and survey questions all related to barriers to providing optimal diabetes care in First Nations communities.
the key factors emerging from interviews and focus group discussions were at the patient, provider, and systemic level. Survey results indicated that, across three isolation levels, healthcare providers' perceived patient factors as having the largest impact on diabetes care. However, physicians and nurses were more likely to rank patient factors as having a large impact on care than community health representatives (CHRs) and physicians were significantly less likely to rank patient-provider communication as having a large impact than CHRs.
Addressing patient factors was considered the highest impact strategy for improving diabetes care. While this may reflect "patient blaming," it also suggests that self-management strategies may be well-suited for this context. Program planning should focus on training programs for CHRs, who provide a unique link between patients and clinical services. Research incorporating patient perspectives is needed to complete this picture and inform quality improvement initiatives.
与一般人群相比,全球范围内的原住民,尤其是加拿大的第一民族,患有 2 型糖尿病及相关并发症的比率较高。研究在保留地第一民族社区工作的医疗保健提供者所面临的独特障碍,对于制定有效的质量改进策略至关重要。
在这项两阶段研究的第一阶段,在安大略省西北部 Sioux Lookout 地区对 24 名医疗保健提供者进行了半结构式访谈和焦点小组讨论。第二阶段作为一个更大的项目(加拿大第一民族糖尿病临床管理和流行病学研究[CIRCLE])的一部分进行了后续调查。该调查在加拿大 7 个省的 19 个第一民族社区的 244 名医疗保健提供者中完成,代表 3 种隔离水平(隔离、半隔离、非隔离)。访谈、焦点小组和调查问题都与在第一民族社区提供最佳糖尿病护理的障碍有关。
访谈和焦点小组讨论中出现的主要因素存在于患者、提供者和系统层面。调查结果表明,在三个隔离水平中,医疗保健提供者认为患者因素对糖尿病护理的影响最大。然而,医生和护士比社区卫生代表更有可能认为患者因素对护理有很大影响,而医生认为患者与提供者之间的沟通对护理有很大影响的可能性明显低于社区卫生代表。
解决患者因素被认为是改善糖尿病护理的最高影响策略。虽然这可能反映了“患者责备”,但也表明自我管理策略可能非常适合这种情况。规划方案应侧重于社区卫生代表的培训计划,他们在患者和临床服务之间提供独特的联系。需要进行纳入患者观点的研究,以完善这一情况并为质量改进举措提供信息。