Department of Family Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Department of Family Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Can J Diabetes. 2018 Jun;42(3):281-288. doi: 10.1016/j.jcjd.2017.06.012. Epub 2017 Aug 15.
The perspectives of physicians caring for Indigenous patients with diabetes offer important insights into the provision of health-care services. The purpose of this study was to describe Canadian physicians' perspectives on diabetes care of Indigenous patients, a preliminary step in developing a continuing medical education intervention described elsewhere.
Through in-depth semistructured interviews, Canadian family physicians and specialists with sizeable proportions of Indigenous clientele shared their experiences of working with Indigenous patients who have type 2 diabetes. Recruitment involved a purposive and convenience sampling strategy, identifying participants through existing research and the professional relationships of team members in the provinces of British Columbia, Alberta and Ontario. Participants addressed their understanding of factors contributing to the disease, approaches to care and recommendations for medical education. The research team framed a thematic analysis through a collaborative, decolonizing lens.
The participants (n=28) included 3 Indigenous physicians, 21 non-Indigenous physicians and 4 non-Indigenous diabetes specialists. They practised in urban, reserve and rural adjacent-to-reserve contexts in 5 Canadian provinces. The physicians constructed a socially framed understanding of the complex contexts influencing Indigenous patients with diabetes in tension with structural barriers to providing diabetes care. As a result, physicians adapted care focusing on social factors and conditions that take into account the multigenerational impacts of colonization and the current social contexts of Indigenous peoples in Canada.
Adaptations in diabetes care by physicians grounded in the historical, social and cultural contexts of their Indigenous patients offer opportunities for improving care quality, but policy and health system supports and structural competency are needed.
关注糖尿病原住民患者的医生的观点为医疗保健服务的提供提供了重要的见解。本研究的目的是描述加拿大医生对原住民 2 型糖尿病患者的护理观点,这是开发其他地方描述的继续医学教育干预措施的初步步骤。
通过深入的半结构化访谈,具有大量原住民患者的加拿大家庭医生和专家分享了他们与患有 2 型糖尿病的原住民患者合作的经验。通过有针对性和方便的抽样策略进行招募,通过现有研究以及不列颠哥伦比亚省、艾伯塔省和安大略省团队成员的专业关系确定参与者。参与者讨论了他们对导致疾病的因素、护理方法和医学教育建议的理解。研究团队通过协作、去殖民化的视角构建了主题分析。
参与者(n=28)包括 3 名原住民医生、21 名非原住民医生和 4 名非原住民糖尿病专家。他们在加拿大 5 个省的城市、保留地和农村相邻保留地环境中执业。医生构建了一个复杂的社会框架,理解影响糖尿病原住民患者的复杂背景,同时面临提供糖尿病护理的结构性障碍。因此,医生调整了护理,重点关注社会因素和条件,这些因素考虑到了殖民化的多代影响以及加拿大原住民当前的社会背景。
医生根据其原住民患者的历史、社会和文化背景进行的糖尿病护理调整为改善护理质量提供了机会,但需要政策和卫生系统支持以及结构能力。