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原住民参与健康事务:来自巴西、智利、澳大利亚和新西兰的经验教训。

Indigenous engagement in health: lessons from Brazil, Chile, Australia and New Zealand.

机构信息

Centre for Health Policy, School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Australia.

Ngāi Tahu Māori Health Research Unit, Department of Preventive and Social Medicine, Dunedin School of Medicine, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.

出版信息

Int J Equity Health. 2020 Jul 31;19(1):47. doi: 10.1186/s12939-020-1149-1.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Given the persistence of Indigenous health inequities across national contexts, many countries have adopted strategies to improve the health of Indigenous peoples. Governmental recognition of the unique health needs of Indigenous populations is necessary for the development of targeted programs and policies to achieve universal health coverage. At the same time, the participation of Indigenous peoples in decision-making and program and policy design helps to ensure that barriers to health services are appropriately addressed and promotes the rights of Indigenous peoples to self-determination. Due to similar patterns of Indigenous health and health determinants across borders, there have been calls for greater global collaboration in this field. However, most international studies on Indigenous health policy link Anglo-settler democracies (Canada, Australia, Aotearoa/New Zealand and the United States), despite these countries representing a small fraction of the world's Indigenous people.

AIM

This paper examines national-level policy in Australia, Brazil, Chile and New Zealand in relation to governmental recognition of differential Indigenous health needs and engagement with Indigenous peoples in health. The paper aims to examine how Indigenous health needs and engagement are addressed in national policy frameworks within each of the countries in order to contribute to the understanding of how to develop pro-equity policies within national health care systems.

METHODS

For each country, a review was undertaken of national policies and legislation to support engagement with, and participation of, Indigenous peoples in the identification of their health needs, development of programs and policies to address these needs and which demonstrate governmental recognition of differential Indigenous health needs. Government websites were searched as well as the following databases: Google, OpenGrey, CAB Direct, PubMed, Web of Science and WorldCat.

FINDINGS

Each of the four countries have adopted international agreements regarding the engagement of Indigenous peoples in health. However, there is significant variation in the extent to which the principles laid out in these agreements are reflected in national policy, legislation and practice. Brazil and New Zealand both have established national policies to facilitate engagement. In contrast, national policy to enable engagement is relatively lacking in Australia and Chile. Australia, Brazil and New Zealand each have significant initiatives and policy structures in place to address Indigenous health. However, in Brazil this is not necessarily reflected in practice and although New Zealand has national policies these have been recently reported as insufficient and, in fact, may be contributing to health inequity for Māori. In comparison to the other three countries, Chile has relatively few national initiatives or policies in place to support Indigenous engagement or recognise the distinct health needs of Indigenous communities.

CONCLUSIONS

The adoption of international policy frameworks forms an important step in ensuring that Indigenous peoples are able to participate in the formation and implementation of health policy and programs. However, without the relevant principles being reflected in national legislature, international agreements hold little weight. At the same time, while a national legislative framework facilitates the engagement of Indigenous peoples, such policy may not necessarily translate into practice. Developing multi-level approaches that improve cohesion between international policy, national policy and practice in Indigenous engagement in health is therefore vital. Given that each of the four countries demonstrate strengths and weaknesses across this causal chain, cross-country policy examination provides guidance on strengthening these links.

摘要

背景

鉴于不同国家的原住民健康不平等问题依然存在,许多国家都采取了策略来改善原住民的健康状况。政府承认原住民群体的独特健康需求,是制定有针对性的项目和政策以实现全民健康覆盖的必要条件。同时,原住民参与决策以及项目和政策设计有助于确保适当解决获得卫生服务的障碍,并促进原住民的自决权。由于跨越国界的原住民健康和健康决定因素存在相似模式,因此有人呼吁在这一领域加强全球合作。然而,大多数关于原住民健康政策的国际研究都将盎格鲁撒克逊定居者民主国家(加拿大、澳大利亚、新西兰和美国)联系在一起,尽管这些国家只代表了世界上一小部分原住民。

目的

本文研究了澳大利亚、巴西、智利和新西兰在国家一级的政策,以了解政府对原住民不同健康需求的认可程度,以及与原住民在健康方面的互动情况。本文旨在研究如何在每个国家的国家政策框架内解决原住民的健康需求和参与问题,以帮助了解如何在国家卫生保健系统内制定有利于公平的政策。

方法

对每个国家的国家政策和立法进行了审查,以支持原住民参与确定其健康需求、制定解决这些需求的方案和政策,并展示政府对原住民不同健康需求的认可。搜索了政府网站以及以下数据库:Google、OpenGrey、CAB Direct、PubMed、Web of Science 和 WorldCat。

结果

这四个国家都通过了关于原住民参与健康的国际协议。然而,这些协议中规定的原则在国家政策、立法和实践中的体现程度存在很大差异。巴西和新西兰都制定了促进参与的国家政策。相比之下,澳大利亚和智利在这方面的国家政策相对欠缺。澳大利亚、巴西和新西兰都有重要的倡议和政策结构来解决原住民的健康问题。然而,在巴西,这并不一定反映在实践中,尽管新西兰有国家政策,但最近有报道称这些政策不足,实际上可能导致毛利人的健康不平等。与其他三个国家相比,智利在支持原住民参与或承认原住民社区独特健康需求方面的国家倡议或政策相对较少。

结论

采用国际政策框架是确保原住民能够参与制定和实施卫生政策和方案的重要步骤。然而,如果国家立法中没有反映相关原则,这些国际协议就没有多大意义。同时,虽然国家立法框架促进了原住民的参与,但这种政策不一定转化为实践。因此,制定加强国际政策、国家政策和原住民参与卫生方面实践之间凝聚力的多层次方法至关重要。鉴于这四个国家在这一因果链上都有优势和劣势,因此对国家间政策的审查为加强这些联系提供了指导。

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