Métis Centre, National Aboriginal Health Organization, Ottawa, ON.
Can J Public Health. 2012 Jan-Feb;103(1):23-8. doi: 10.1007/BF03404064.
Several literature reviews have highlighted the under-representation of Métis in research regarding Aboriginal Peoples. However, to date, an in-depth examination of trends in Métis research has not been undertaken. This literature review aims to identify trends and gaps in Métis-related health/well-being research over the past three decades (1980-2009).
Health, medical and social sciences literature databases including Cochrane, CINAHL, Embase, Pubmed, PyschInfo, and Web of Science were searched for Métis-relevant peer-reviewed articles published between 1980 and 2009 via two search strategies: 1) using the terms "Métis," "mixed-blood" or "half-breed," and 2) using a combination of terms: (Aboriginal OR Indigenous OR native OR "First Nation" OR Indian) and (mixed OR European OR Caucasian OR white) and "Canada". Articles pertaining to the health/well-being of Métis in Canada were retained, coded and analyzed by study type/design, gender-specificity, geography, research topic, the extent to which Métis-specific breakdown of findings was provided, and methodological quality relating to validity and reliability of the study.
Noteworthy strengths in Métis research were observed, including increasing attention to chronic diseases, diet/nutrition/physical activity, and maternal and child health; a trend towards increased presentation of Métis-specific results among pan-Aboriginal studies, and female-specific and qualitative studies; and an equitable focus on urban and rural areas. Gaps were seen in research related to environment/toxicology, genetics, health delivery/programming/policy, injury, mental health (MH)/addictions, social determinants of health, and violence/crime. In addition, a dearth of male-specific research was identified. Also, most articles were cross-sectional in design. Finally, despite an increase in Métis-related articles over the past three decades, a large proportion of articles remained pan-Aboriginal in nature and did not provide a Métis-specific breakdown of findings. With respect to methodological quality, nearly two thirds of all studies were of strong or moderate quality (cross-sectional studies), good quality (cohort/case-control studies) or acceptable quality (qualitative and mixed methods studies).
Several gaps exist in Métis-related health/well-being research with respect to study type/design, gender-specificity, research topics, presentation of Métis-specific findings, and methodological quality. In addition to specific gaps, the overall limited number of research articles/studies needs to be recognized. These deficiencies could be alleviated by increasing targeted funding and support for Métis-related research, and removing barriers to Métis-specific research. Addressing gaps in Métis health research will enable identification of appropriate targets for intervention and, subsequently, design, development and evaluation of interventions to address Métis health disparities and their determinants.
多项文献综述强调了梅蒂斯人在关于原住民的研究中代表性不足。然而,迄今为止,尚未对梅蒂斯人的研究趋势进行深入研究。本文献综述旨在确定过去三十年(1980-2009 年)与梅蒂斯人相关的健康/福祉研究中的趋势和差距。
通过两种搜索策略,在包括 Cochrane、CINAHL、Embase、Pubmed、PyschInfo 和 Web of Science 在内的健康、医学和社会科学文献数据库中,搜索了 1980 年至 2009 年间发表的与梅蒂斯人相关的同行评审文章:1)使用术语“梅蒂斯人”、“混血儿”或“杂种”,2)使用以下术语的组合:(原住民或土著或本土或第一民族或印第安人)和(混合或欧洲或白种或白人)和“加拿大”。保留了与加拿大梅蒂斯人健康/福祉相关的文章,对其进行了编码和分析,分析内容包括研究类型/设计、性别特异性、地理位置、研究主题、提供的梅蒂斯人具体研究结果的程度以及与研究的有效性和可靠性相关的方法学质量。
观察到梅蒂斯人研究的显著优势,包括越来越关注慢性病、饮食/营养/体育活动以及母婴健康;在泛原住民研究中,女性特定和定性研究以及城市和农村地区平等关注的趋势有所增加;以及在环境/毒理学、遗传学、健康提供/规划/政策、伤害、心理健康(MH)/成瘾、健康的社会决定因素和暴力/犯罪方面的研究差距。此外,还发现缺乏男性特定的研究。此外,大多数文章的设计都是横断面研究。最后,尽管过去三十年与梅蒂斯人相关的文章有所增加,但大部分文章仍然是泛原住民性质的,没有提供梅蒂斯人具体的研究结果。就方法学质量而言,近三分之二的研究具有较强或中等质量(横断面研究)、良好质量(队列/病例对照研究)或可接受质量(定性和混合方法研究)。
在与梅蒂斯人相关的健康/福祉研究方面,在研究类型/设计、性别特异性、研究主题、提供梅蒂斯人特定研究结果以及方法学质量方面存在一些差距。除了具体的差距外,还需要认识到总体上研究文章/研究的数量有限。通过增加针对梅蒂斯人相关研究的有针对性的资金和支持,以及消除梅蒂斯人特定研究的障碍,可以缓解这些不足。解决梅蒂斯人健康研究中的差距将能够确定干预的适当目标,随后设计、开发和评估干预措施,以解决梅蒂斯人健康差距及其决定因素。