College of Public Health, Medical and Veterinary Sciences, James Cook University, James Cook Drive, Townsville, QLD, 4810, Australia.
Nossal Institute for Global Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, 3010, Australia.
Int J Equity Health. 2018 May 30;17(1):67. doi: 10.1186/s12939-018-0779-z.
Health policy in Australia positions Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Workers (AHWs) as central to improving Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples' health, with high expectations of their contribution to closing the gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous health outcomes. Understanding how AHWs' governance and accountability relationships influence their ability to address such health inequities has policy, programme and ethical significance. We sought to map the evidence of AHWs' experiences of accountability in the Australian health system.
We followed an adapted qualitative systematic review process to map evidence on accountability relations in the published literature. We sought empirical studies or first-person accounts describing AHWs' experiences of working in government or Aboriginal community-controlled services anywhere in Australia. Findings were organised according to van Belle and Mayhew's four dimensions of accountability - social, political, provider and organisational.
Of 27 included studies, none had a primary focus on AHW governance or AHWs' accountability relationships. Nonetheless, selected articles provided some insight into AHWs' experiences of accountability across van Belle and Mayhew's four dimensions. In the social dimension, AHWs' sense of connection and belonging to community was reflected in the importance placed on AHWs' cultural brokerage and advocacy functions. But social and cultural obligations overlapped and sometimes clashed with organisational and provider-related accountabilities. AHWs described having to straddle cultural obligations (e.g. related to gender, age and kinship) alongside the expectations of non-Indigenous colleagues and supervisors which were underpinned by 'Western' models of clinical governance and management. Lack of role-clarity stemming from weakly constituted (state-based) career structures was linked to a system-wide misunderstanding of AHWs' roles and responsibilities - particularly the cultural components - acting as a barrier to AHWs working to their full capacity for the benefit of patients, broader society and their own professional satisfaction.
In literature spanning different geographies, service domains and several decades, this review found evidence of complexity in AHWs' accountability relationships that both affects individual and team performance. However, theoretically informed and systematic investigation of accountability relationships and related issues, including the power dynamics that underpin AHW governance and performance in often diverse settings, remains limited and more work in this area is required.
澳大利亚的卫生政策将原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民卫生工作者(AHWs)定位为改善原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民健康的核心力量,对他们缩小原住民和非原住民健康结果差距的贡献寄予厚望。了解 AHW 治理和问责关系如何影响他们解决此类健康不平等问题的能力,具有政策、计划和伦理意义。我们试图绘制 AHW 在澳大利亚卫生系统中承担问责制的经验证据图。
我们遵循经过改编的定性系统审查过程,以绘制发表文献中问责制关系的证据图。我们在澳大利亚任何地方的政府或土著社区控制服务中寻找描述 AHW 工作经验的实证研究或第一人称叙述。研究结果根据范贝尔和梅休的问责制的四个维度(社会、政治、提供者和组织)进行组织。
在 27 项纳入的研究中,没有一项主要关注 AHW 的治理或 AHW 的问责关系。尽管如此,选定的文章还是提供了一些关于 AHW 在范贝尔和梅休的四个维度上的问责经验的见解。在社会层面上,AHW 与社区的联系感和归属感反映在 AHW 文化中介和倡导职能的重要性上。但是社会和文化义务与组织和提供者相关的问责制重叠,有时甚至相互冲突。AHW 描述了他们必须在文化义务(例如与性别、年龄和亲属关系有关)与非原住民同事和主管的期望之间取得平衡,这些期望是基于临床治理和管理的“西方”模式。由于职业结构构成薄弱(基于州)而导致的角色不明确,与对 AHW 角色和责任的系统误解有关——特别是文化方面——这成为 AHW 充分发挥作用以造福患者、更广泛的社会和自身职业满意度的障碍。
在跨越不同地理位置、服务领域和几十年的文献中,本综述发现了 AHW 问责关系的复杂性的证据,这既影响了个人和团队的绩效。然而,在理论上有依据和系统地调查问责关系和相关问题,包括在通常多样化的环境中支撑 AHW 治理和绩效的权力动态,仍然有限,需要在这方面做更多的工作。