Western Australian Centre for Rural Health, University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
Int J Equity Health. 2017 Jul 6;16(1):119. doi: 10.1186/s12939-017-0615-x.
Rural and remote communities in Australia fare worse than their urban counterparts across major health indicators, with geographic isolation, restricted accessibility to health services, socioeconomic disadvantage, lifestyle and behavioural factors all implicated in poorer health outcomes. Health disparities, which are especially stark in Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander populations, underscore the urgent need to build a culturally responsive and respectful rural health workforce. Allied health student placements in settings with high Aboriginal populations provide opportunities for the development of cultural capabilities and observation of the causes and impact of health disparities. A service learning pedagogy underpinned by strong campus-community partnerships can contribute to effective situated learning. Positive placement experiences can also encourage future rural practice alleviating workforce shortages. This article reports on the first stage of a proposed longitudinal investigation into the impact of remote placements on clinical practice and employment choices.
In-depth interviews were undertaken with health science students and recent graduates from Australian universities who spent up to 4 weeks at the remote community of Mt. Magnet (Badimaya country) in Western Australia. Interviews, which occurred between two and 12 months following the placement were recorded, transcribed and thematically analysed for patterns of meaning.
Factors which contributed to positive professional, personal and socially responsive learning experiences were identified. These included pre-placement cultural training to build understanding of the local Aboriginal community, peer support, community engagement, cultural exchanges and interprofessional collaboration. Highlights were associated with relationship-building in the community and opportunities to apply insights into Aboriginal cultural ways to clinical and community practice. The role of the Aboriginal mentor was integral to students' understanding of the social and cultural dynamics in the practice setting. Challenges related to the logistics of supervision in remote locations and workloads.
The interprofessional placement offered students a unique opportunity to experience how isolation, socioeconomic disadvantage and cultural factors conspire to produce health inequities in remote Australian settings and to observe how communities respond to their circumstances. Despite difficulties encountered, learnings derived from the application of clinical, social and interprofessional skills, and rural employment opportunities that arose following graduation, were all highly valued.
在主要健康指标方面,澳大利亚的农村和偏远社区比城市社区差,地理隔离、获得卫生服务的机会有限、社会经济劣势、生活方式和行为因素都与较差的健康结果有关。健康差距在澳大利亚原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民中尤为明显,这突显了急需建立一支对文化有反应和尊重的农村卫生工作队伍。在原住民人口较多的环境中,为医疗保健专业学生提供实习机会,为发展文化能力以及观察健康差距的原因和影响提供了机会。以强大的校园-社区伙伴关系为基础的服务学习教学法可以促进有效的情境学习。积极的实习经历也可以鼓励未来从事农村工作,缓解劳动力短缺。本文报告了对偏远地区实习对临床实践和就业选择影响的一项拟议纵向研究的第一阶段结果。
对来自澳大利亚大学的卫生科学专业学生和应届毕业生进行了深入访谈,他们在西澳大利亚州的偏远社区芒特梅格尼特(Badimaya 地区)进行了长达 4 周的实习。在实习结束后 2 至 12 个月进行了访谈,记录、转录并对主题进行分析以寻找意义模式。
确定了有助于产生积极的专业、个人和对社会有反应的学习体验的因素。这些因素包括在当地原住民社区建立理解的入职前文化培训、同伴支持、社区参与、文化交流和跨专业合作。亮点与社区内的关系建设以及将对原住民文化方式的见解应用于临床和社区实践的机会有关。原住民导师的角色对于学生理解实践环境中的社会和文化动态至关重要。挑战与偏远地区的监督后勤工作和工作量有关。
该跨专业实习为学生提供了一个独特的机会,让他们体验到孤立、社会经济劣势和文化因素如何共同导致澳大利亚偏远地区的健康不平等,并观察社区如何应对其环境。尽管遇到了困难,但从应用临床、社会和跨专业技能中获得的学习成果,以及毕业后出现的农村就业机会,都受到高度重视。