School of Rural and Northern Health, Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, P3E 2C6, Canada.
Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
BMC Geriatr. 2020 Apr 19;20(1):145. doi: 10.1186/s12877-020-01552-5.
Indigenous people continue to experience high rates of multiple chronic conditions (MCC) at younger ages than other populations, resulting in an increase in health and social care needs. Those who provide services designed to address MCC for Indigenous communities require synthesized information to develop interventions that meet the needs of their older adult population. This review seeks to answer the research question: What are the health and social care needs, priorities and preferences of Indigenous older adults (living outside of long-term care settings) with MCC and their caregivers?
A scoping review, guided by a refinement of the Arksey & O'Malley framework, was conducted. Articles were included if the authors reported on health and social care needs and priorities of older Indigenous adults. We also included articles that focused on Indigenous conceptions of wellness, resilience, well-being, and/or balance within the context of aging, and articles where authors drew from Indigenous specific worldviews, ways of knowing, cultural safety, cultural competence, cultural appropriateness, cultural relevance and community needs.
This scoping review included 9 articles that were examined using an Indigenous determinants of health (IDH) theoretical framework to analyze the needs of older adults and CGs. Five areas of needs were identified: accessible health services; building community capacity; improved social support networks; preservation of cultural values in health care; and wellness-based approaches.
The review highlights key determinants of health that influenced older adults' needs: education and literacy, ethnicity, and social support/network (proximal); health promotion and health care (intermediate); and a combination of historical and contemporary structures (distal). The findings highlight the importance of local Indigenous knowledge and perspectives to improve accessibility of culturally relevant health and social services.
与其他人群相比,原住民在更年轻时就持续经历多种慢性疾病(MCC),导致他们的健康和社会护理需求增加。那些为原住民社区提供旨在解决 MCC 的服务的人需要综合信息来制定干预措施,以满足其老年人口的需求。本综述旨在回答研究问题:患有 MCC 的原住民老年人(居住在长期护理环境之外)及其照顾者的健康和社会护理需求、优先事项和偏好是什么?
本研究采用了一种由 Arksey 和 O'Malley 框架细化而来的范围综述方法。如果作者报告了原住民老年人的健康和社会护理需求和优先事项,则将文章纳入研究范围。我们还纳入了关注原住民在老龄化背景下的健康、韧性、幸福感和/或平衡的概念的文章,以及作者借鉴原住民特定世界观、认知方式、文化安全、文化能力、文化适宜性、文化相关性和社区需求的文章。
本范围综述共纳入 9 篇文章,这些文章使用原住民健康决定因素(IDH)理论框架来分析老年人及其照顾者的需求。确定了五个需求领域:可及的医疗服务;建立社区能力;改善社会支持网络;在医疗保健中保留文化价值观;以及基于健康的方法。
综述强调了影响老年人需求的关键健康决定因素:教育和识字水平、种族和社会支持/网络(近端);健康促进和医疗保健(中间);以及历史和当代结构的结合(远端)。研究结果强调了利用当地原住民知识和观点来改善文化相关健康和社会服务的可及性的重要性。