Harfield Stephen, Davy Carol, Kite Elaine, McArthur Alexa, Munn Zachary, Brown Ngiare, Brown Alex
1 National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organization, Canberra, Australia2 Wardliparingga Aboriginal Health Research Unit, South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute, Australia3 School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Australia4 Joanna Briggs Institute, Faculty of Health Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Australia5 Indigenous Health and Education, Faculty of Education and Graduate School of Medicine, University of Wollongong, Australia.
JBI Database System Rev Implement Rep. 2015 Nov;13(11):43-51. doi: 10.11124/jbisrir-2015-2474.
The objective of the scoping review is to identify and describe within the existing literature the characteristics (values, principles, components and suggest practical applications) of primary health care models of service delivery for Indigenous people. More specifically, the review question is:What are the characteristics (values, principles, components and suggested practical applications) of primary health care models of service delivery for Indigenous people?Findings from this scoping review will inform two systematic reviews. One of these will explore the acceptability and the other the effectiveness of identified characteristics.
The scoping review will follow the JBI Scoping Review methodology as outlined in the 2015 Joanna Briggs Institute Reviewers' Manual.
Indigenous populations in colonized countries experience worse health outcomes relative to their non-Indigenous counterparts. In Australia, in the period 2010 to 2012 the estimated gap in life expectancy between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians compared to non-Indigenous Australians was 10 years Similar gaps in life expectancy between Indigenous and non-Indigenous have been demonstrated in other countries, such as New Zealand, Canada and the United StatesThe gap in life expectancy and the health disadvantage experienced by Indigenous people is in part the result of mainstream health services not adequately meeting the health needs of Indigenous people and Indigenous people's inability to access mainstream services Part of the solution has been the establishment of primary health care services for and in many cases run by Indigenous people. Indigenous primary health services have been developed to provide culturally appropriate services that meet the needs of local Indigenous communities.In Australia, the first Aboriginal medical service was established in 1971 in Redfern, New South Wales, by "community activists in response to ongoing discrimination against Aboriginal people within mainstream health services to address the poor health and premature deaths of Aboriginal people, and to provide a culturally appropriate system of health care". There are now over 150 Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services in Australia. Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services are underpinned by common values such as culture, cultural respect, integrity, inclusion, self-determination, community control, sovereignty and leadership.Similar models of Indigenous health services exist in other countries, such as Māori health providers in New Zealand, First Nations and Inuit Health Authorities in Canada, and the Indian Health Services in the US. In New Zealand, Māori health providers deliver health and disability services to Māori and non-Māori clients. The difference between Māori health providers and mainstream services in New Zealand is that Māori health services are based on kaupapa, a plan or set of principles and ideas that informs behavior and customs, and the delivery framework which is distinctively Māori. First Nations and Inuit Health Authorities in Canada coordinate and integrate health programs and services to achieve better health outcomes for First Nations people. These community-based services largely focus on health promotion and prevention. First Nations and Inuit Health Authorities work under a unique health governance structure that includes local First Nations' leadership, based on the philosophy of self-governance and self-determination, which represent and address the health needs of First Nation communities. The Indian Health Service (IHS) in the US is responsible for providing comprehensive health services to American Indians and Alaska Natives. The IHS aims to raise the physical, mental, social and spiritual health of American Indians and Alaska Natives to the highest level, and its goal is "to ensure that comprehensive, culturally acceptable personal and public health services are available and accessible to American Indian and Alaska Native people". The IHS "grew out of a special government-to-government relationship between the federal government and Indian Tribes".Evidence suggests that "a strong primary health care sector is essential to the health and wellbeing of a population, and that a strong primary health care sector is associated with better population health, reduced costs of health care provision, and greater efficiency within the system". A study of Aboriginal Canadians shows that poor access and ineffective primary health care services were directly related to increased avoidable hospital admissions. In addition, a recent study in Australia focusing on the costs and the health outcomes associated with primary care use by Indigenous people with diabetes in remote communities in the Northern Territory demonstrates that improved access to primary health care which is responsive to the needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people is both cost-effective and associated with better health outcomes.Given the strong link between primary health care and health outcomes and the significant contribution Indigenous health services make towards reducing the health disadvantage experienced by Indigenous people, it is important to understand the characteristics that support the delivery of health provided by Indigenous health services and their unique models. While there is not a clear definition in the literature about what a model of care or model of service delivery is, for the purpose of this review, it will encompass all factors involved in the delivery of care including but not limited to the vision, values and strategies that underpin the delivery of care, healthcare services and programs, governance and leadership, workforce, organization and supply, and infrastructure and other resources.The aim of this scoping review is to determine the characteristics of Indigenous primary health care models of service delivery by drawing on existing literature that look at the way in which services are delivered in this setting.An initial search of literature was conducted to establish whether there are studies with findings available to answer the review question, and whether there is a systematic or scoping review addressing the knowledge gap currently underway or published. There are no systematic or scoping reviews published or underway that address the question proposed by this review.
本范围综述的目的是在现有文献中识别和描述针对原住民的初级卫生保健服务提供模式的特征(价值观、原则、组成部分及建议的实际应用)。更具体地说,综述问题是:针对原住民的初级卫生保健服务提供模式的特征(价值观、原则、组成部分及建议的实际应用)是什么?本次范围综述的结果将为两项系统综述提供信息。其中一项将探讨所确定特征的可接受性,另一项将探讨其有效性。
范围综述将遵循2015年乔安娜·布里格斯研究所评审手册中概述的JBI范围综述方法。
在殖民国家,原住民的健康状况相对于非原住民更差。在澳大利亚,2010年至2012年期间,澳大利亚原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民与非原住民之间的预期寿命估计差距为10年。在其他国家,如新西兰、加拿大和美国,也证明了原住民和非原住民之间存在类似的预期寿命差距。原住民预期寿命的差距以及他们所经历的健康劣势,部分原因是主流卫生服务未能充分满足原住民的健康需求,以及原住民无法获得主流服务。部分解决方案是为原住民建立并在许多情况下由原住民运营的初级卫生保健服务。原住民初级卫生服务的发展是为了提供符合文化习俗的服务,以满足当地原住民社区的需求。
1971年,在新南威尔士州的雷德芬,“社区活动家为应对主流卫生服务中对原住民的持续歧视,以解决原住民的健康不佳和过早死亡问题,并提供符合文化习俗的医疗保健系统”,成立了澳大利亚第一个原住民医疗服务机构。现在澳大利亚有超过150个原住民社区控制的卫生服务机构。原住民社区控制的卫生服务机构以文化、文化尊重、诚信、包容(接纳)、自决、社区控制、主权和领导力等共同价值观为基础。
在其他国家也存在类似的原住民卫生服务模式,如新西兰的毛利人卫生服务提供者、加拿大的第一民族和因纽特人卫生当局以及美国的印第安卫生服务机构。在新西兰,毛利人卫生服务提供者为毛利人和非毛利客户提供健康和残疾服务。毛利人卫生服务提供者与新西兰主流服务的不同之处在于,毛利人卫生服务基于“ kaupapa”,即一个指导行为和习俗的计划或一套原则及理念,以及具有鲜明毛利特色的服务提供框架。加拿大的第一民族和因纽特人卫生当局协调和整合卫生项目及服务,以实现第一民族人民更好的健康结果。这些基于社区的服务主要侧重于健康促进和预防。第一民族和因纽特人卫生当局在一个独特的卫生治理结构下运作,该结构包括基于自治和自决理念的当地第一民族领导层,代表并满足第一民族社区的健康需求。美国的印第安卫生服务机构(IHS)负责为美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民提供全面的卫生服务。印第安卫生服务机构旨在将美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民的身体、心理、社会和精神健康提升到最高水平,其目标是“确保美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民能够获得并可利用全面的、符合文化习俗的个人和公共卫生服务”。印第安卫生服务机构“源于联邦政府与印第安部落之间特殊的政府对政府关系”。
有证据表明,“强大的初级卫生保健部门对民众的健康和福祉至关重要,而且强大的初级卫生保健部门与更好的人群健康、降低的医疗保健提供成本以及系统内更高的效率相关联”。一项对加拿大原住民的研究表明,获得初级卫生保健服务的机会不足和服务无效与可避免的住院人数增加直接相关。此外,澳大利亚最近一项针对北领地偏远社区糖尿病原住民使用初级保健的成本和健康结果的研究表明,改善对符合原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民需求的初级卫生保健的可及性既具有成本效益,又与更好的健康结果相关联。
鉴于初级卫生保健与健康结果之间的紧密联系以及原住民卫生服务对减少原住民所经历的健康劣势的重大贡献,了解支持原住民卫生服务提供的特征及其独特模式非常重要。虽然文献中对于护理模式或服务提供模式没有明确的定义,但就本次综述而言,它将涵盖护理提供过程中涉及的所有因素,包括但不限于支撑护理提供的愿景、价值观和策略、医疗保健服务和项目、治理与领导、劳动力、组织与供应以及基础设施和其他资源。
本次范围综述的目的是通过借鉴现有文献中关于该环境下服务提供方式的研究,来确定原住民初级卫生保健服务提供模式的特征。
对文献进行了初步检索,以确定是否有研究结果可用于回答综述问题,以及是否有正在进行或已发表的系统综述或范围综述来解决当前的知识空白。目前没有已发表或正在进行的系统综述或范围综述涉及本次综述提出的问题。