Durey Angela, McAullay Dan, Gibson Barry, Slack-Smith Linda
School of Dentistry, University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Perth, 6009, WA, Australia.
School of Clinical Dentistry, University of Sheffield, 31 Claremont Crescent,, Sheffield, S10 2TA, UK.
Int J Equity Health. 2016 Jan 12;15:4. doi: 10.1186/s12939-016-0299-7.
Improving oral health for Aboriginal Australians has been slow. Despite dental disease being largely preventable, Aboriginal Australians have worse periodontal disease, more decayed teeth and untreated dental caries than other Australians. Reasons for this are complex and risk factors include broader social and historic determinants such as marginalisation and discrimination that impact on Aboriginal people making optimum choices about oral health. This paper presents findings from a qualitative study conducted in the Perth metropolitan area investigating Aboriginal Health Workers' (AHWs) perceptions of barriers and enablers to oral health for Aboriginal people.
Following extensive consultation with Aboriginal stakeholders, researchers conducted semi-structured interviews and focus groups across 13 sites to investigate AHWs' perceptions of barriers and enablers to oral health based on professional and personal experience. Responses from 35 AHWs were analysed independently by two researchers to identify themes that they compared, discussed, revised and organised under key themes. These were summarised and interrogated for similarities and differences with evidence in the literature.
Key findings indicated that broader structural and social factors informed oral health choices. Perceptions of barriers included cost of services and healthy diets on limited budgets, attending services for pain not prevention, insufficient education about oral health and preventing disease, public dental services not meeting demand, and blame and discrimination from some health providers. Suggested improvements included oral health education, delivering flexible services respectful of Aboriginal people, oral health services for 0-4 year olds and role modelling of oral health across generations.
Reviewing current models of oral health education and service delivery is needed to reduce oral health disparities between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australians. Shifting the discourse from blaming Aboriginal people for their poor oral health to addressing structural factors impacting on optimum oral health choices is important. This includes Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal stakeholders working together to develop and implement policies and practices that are respectful, well-resourced and improve oral health outcomes.
改善澳大利亚原住民的口腔健康进展缓慢。尽管牙科疾病在很大程度上是可以预防的,但与其他澳大利亚人相比,澳大利亚原住民的牙周疾病更严重,龋齿更多,且有更多未治疗的龋齿。造成这种情况的原因很复杂,风险因素包括更广泛的社会和历史决定因素,如边缘化和歧视,这些因素影响着原住民做出关于口腔健康的最佳选择。本文介绍了在珀斯都会区进行的一项定性研究的结果,该研究调查了原住民健康工作者(AHW)对原住民口腔健康的障碍和促进因素的看法。
在与原住民利益相关者进行广泛协商后,研究人员在13个地点进行了半结构化访谈和焦点小组讨论,以根据专业和个人经验调查AHW对口腔健康障碍和促进因素的看法。两名研究人员独立分析了35名AHW的回答,以确定他们在关键主题下进行比较、讨论、修订和整理的主题。对这些主题进行了总结,并与文献中的证据进行了异同分析。
主要研究结果表明,更广泛的结构和社会因素影响着口腔健康选择。障碍包括服务成本和有限预算下的健康饮食、因疼痛而非预防而就医、口腔健康教育和疾病预防不足、公共牙科服务无法满足需求,以及一些医疗服务提供者的指责和歧视。建议的改进措施包括口腔健康教育、提供尊重原住民的灵活服务、为0至4岁儿童提供口腔健康服务,以及跨代进行口腔健康示范。
需要审查当前的口腔健康教育和服务提供模式,以减少澳大利亚原住民和非原住民之间的口腔健康差距。将讨论重点从指责原住民口腔健康差转向解决影响最佳口腔健康选择的结构因素很重要。这包括原住民和非原住民利益相关者共同努力制定和实施尊重、资源充足且能改善口腔健康结果的政策和做法。