Raman S, Ruston S, Irwin S, Tran P, Hotton P, Thorne S
Department of Community Paediatrics, South Western Sydney Local Health District, Liverpool, NSW, Australia.
School of Women's and Children's Health, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Child Care Health Dev. 2017 Nov;43(6):899-905. doi: 10.1111/cch.12488. Epub 2017 Jul 23.
Children in out-of-home care have well-documented health and developmental needs. Research suggests that Aboriginal children in care have unmet health and intervention needs. In metropolitan Sydney, Kari Aboriginal Resources Inc. (KARI), an Aboriginal organization, provides support to indigenous children in care, including clinical assessment and intervention. We wanted to determine the health and developmental needs of a subset of children in out-of-home care with KARI, who had been in stable care for at least a year. We wanted to identify child, carer, and intervention characteristics that contributed to children doing well. We also wanted to identify enablers and barriers to providing culturally competent intervention.
We used mixed methods. From the KARI clinic database over the past 3 years, we identified children who had been in stable care with KARI for >12 months. We compared clinical measures and outcomes for these children with results from previous audits. We carried out a group discussion and key informant interviews with therapists and caseworkers to identify risk and resilience factors for each child, as well as enablers and barriers to culturally competent intervention.
The health and developmental profile of the 26 children identified as being in stable care was similar to that of previous audits. Most (88%) were getting speech pathology intervention; one third were getting occupational therapy and psychological intervention; most children and their carers attended cultural programmes. The majority of children (25/26) improved in their developmental health. Caseworkers and therapists identified risk and resilience factors related to child, carer, and home characteristics. They also identified elements of good practice; systemic issues prevented some interventions from being carried out.
There are challenges delivering a trauma-informed, culturally respectful service to Aboriginal children in out-of-home care in an urban setting, but it can be done if attention is paid to culture and the enablers and barriers are identified.
在家庭外照料机构中的儿童有着记录详实的健康和发展需求。研究表明,接受照料的原住民儿童存在未得到满足的健康和干预需求。在悉尼大都市地区,原住民组织卡里原住民资源公司(KARI)为接受照料的原住民儿童提供支持,包括临床评估和干预。我们想要确定在KARI接受照料且已在稳定照料环境中至少生活一年的部分儿童的健康和发展需求。我们想要识别有助于儿童良好发展的儿童、照料者及干预特征。我们还想要确定提供具有文化胜任力干预的促进因素和障碍。
我们采用了混合方法。从过去3年的KARI诊所数据库中,我们识别出在KARI稳定照料环境中生活超过12个月的儿童。我们将这些儿童的临床测量指标和结果与之前审计的结果进行了比较。我们与治疗师和个案工作者进行了小组讨论和关键信息访谈,以识别每个儿童的风险和复原力因素,以及具有文化胜任力干预的促进因素和障碍。
被确定处于稳定照料环境中的26名儿童的健康和发展状况与之前的审计结果相似。大多数(88%)儿童接受了言语病理学干预;三分之一的儿童接受了职业治疗和心理干预;大多数儿童及其照料者参加了文化项目。大多数儿童(25/26)在发育健康方面有所改善。个案工作者和治疗师识别出了与儿童、照料者及家庭特征相关的风险和复原力因素。他们还识别出了良好实践的要素;系统性问题阻碍了一些干预措施的实施。
在城市环境中为处于家庭外照料机构的原住民儿童提供注重创伤和文化尊重的服务存在挑战,但如果关注文化并识别促进因素和障碍,是可以做到的。