Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Thunder Bay, ON P7B 5E1, Canada.
Centre for Rural and Northern Health Research, Laurentian University, Sudbury, ON P3E 2C6, Canada.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2018 Feb 4;15(2):267. doi: 10.3390/ijerph15020267.
(1) Background: Remote communities in Canada lack an equitable emergency medical response capacity compared to other communities. Community-based emergency care (CBEC) training for laypeople is a model that has the potential to enhance the medical emergency response capacity in isolated and resource-limited contexts. The purpose of this study was to understand the characteristics of medical emergencies and to conceptualize and present a framework for what a medical emergency is for one remote Indigenous community in northwestern Ontario, in order to inform the development of CBEC training. (2) Methods: This study adhered to the principles of community-based participatory research and realist evaluation; it was an integrated component of the formative evaluation of the second Sachigo Lake Wilderness Emergency Response Education Initiative (SLWEREI) training course in 2012. Twelve members of Sachigo Lake First Nation participated in the training course, along with local nursing staff, police officers, community Elders, and course instructors (n = 24 total), who participated in interviews, focus groups, and a collaborative discussion of local health issues in the development of the SLWEREI. (3) Results: The qualitative results are organized into sections that describe the types of local health emergencies and the informal response system of community members in addressing these emergencies. Prominent themes of health adversity that emerged were an inability to manage chronic conditions and fears of exacerbations, the lack of capacity for addressing mental illness, and the high prevalence of injury for community members. (4) Discussion: A three-point framework of what constitutes local perceptions of an emergency emerged from the findings in this study: (1) a sense of isolation; (2) a condition with a potentially adverse outcome; and (3) a need for help.
(1) 背景:加拿大偏远社区的紧急医疗响应能力与其他社区相比存在不平等现象。针对非专业人员的社区紧急护理 (CBEC) 培训是一种有可能增强孤立和资源有限环境中医疗应急响应能力的模式。本研究的目的是了解医疗紧急情况的特征,并为安大略省西北部一个偏远的土著社区的医疗紧急情况概念化并提出一个框架,以便为 CBEC 培训提供信息。 (2) 方法:本研究遵循社区参与式研究和现实主义评价的原则;它是 2012 年 Sachigo Lake 荒野紧急反应教育倡议 (SLWEREI) 培训课程形成性评价的一个组成部分。12 名 Sachigo Lake 第一民族成员参加了培训课程,还有当地的护理人员、警察、社区长老和课程讲师(共 24 人),他们参加了访谈、焦点小组和关于当地卫生问题的协作讨论,为 SLWEREI 的开发提供了帮助。 (3) 结果:定性结果分为几节,描述了当地卫生紧急情况的类型和社区成员应对这些紧急情况的非正式响应系统。出现的突出健康逆境主题包括无法管理慢性病和对恶化的恐惧、处理精神疾病的能力不足以及社区成员受伤的高发率。 (4) 讨论:本研究的结果提出了构成当地对紧急情况看法的三点框架:(1) 孤立感;(2) 具有潜在不利结果的状况;(3) 需要帮助。