Griffith University, School of Medicine, Gold Coast, Qld 4215, Australia. Email:
Griffith University, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Gold Coast, Qld 4215, Australia. Email:
Aust Health Rev. 2021 Aug;45(4):398-406. doi: 10.1071/AH20215.
Objective Health practitioners' Codes of Conduct and Codes of Ethics articulate practice standards across multiple domains, including the domain of cultural safety. As key tools driving individual practice and systems reform, Codes are integral to improving health outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. It is, therefore, critical that their contents specify meaningful cultural safety standards as the norm for institutional and individual practice. This research assessed all Codes for cultural safety specific content. Methods Following the release of the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency's (Ahpra) Health and Cultural Safety strategy 2020-25, the 16 Ahpra registered health practitioner Board Codes of Conduct and professional Codes of Ethics were analysed by comparing content to Ahpra's new cultural safety objectives. Two Codes of Conduct, Nursing and Midwifery, met these objectives. The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Practitioners Code partially met these objectives. Results Most Codes of Conduct (14 of 16) conflated Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples with culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) communities undermining the sovereignty of Australia's First Peoples. Eleven professions had a Code of Ethics, including the Physiotherapy Code of Conduct, which outlined the values and ethical principles of practice commonly associated with a Code of Ethics. Of the 11 professions with a Code of Ethics, two (Pharmacy and Psychology) articulated specific ethical responsibilities to First Peoples. Physiotherapy separately outlined cultural safety obligations through their reconciliation action plan (RAP), meeting all Ahpra cultural safety objectives. The remaining eight advocated respect of culture generally rather than respect for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures specifically. Conclusions The review identified multiple areas to improve the codes for cultural safety content for registered health professions, providing a roadmap for action to strengthen individual and systems practice while setting a clear regulatory standard to ensure culturally safe practice becomes the new norm. It recommends the systematic updating of all professional health practitioner Board Codes of Conduct and professional Codes of Ethics based on the objectives outlined in Ahpra's Cultural Safety Strategy. What is known about the topic? Systemic racism and culturally unsafe work environments contribute to poor health outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. They also contribute to the under-representation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in the health workforce, denying the system, and the people who use and work in it, much needed Indigenous knowledge. Creating a culturally safe healthcare system requires all health practitioners to reflect on their own cultural background, to gain appreciation of the positive and negative impacts of individually held cultural assumptions on the delivery of healthcare services. Competence in cultural safety as a required standard of practice is therefore essential if broad, sustainable and systemic cultural change across the health professions and ultimately across Australia's healthcare system is to be achieved. Given that Codes of Conduct and Codes of Ethics are integral in setting the practical and moral standards of the professions, their contents with respect to cultural competence are of great importance. What does this paper add? A review of this type has not been undertaken previously. Following the establishment of the Ahpra Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Strategy Group, release of Ahpra's 2018 Statement of intent, and the 2019 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health and Cultural Safety strategic plan and Reconciliation Action Plan, we analysed the content of each of the 16 registered health professions Codes of Conduct and Code of Ethics looking for content and guidance in accordance with the new national cultural safety definition. Several opportunities to improve the Codes of Conduct and Codes of Ethics were identified to realise the vision set out in the statement of intent including through the application of the National Law. This analysis provides a baseline for future improvements and confirms that although some current health practitioner Codes of Conduct and Codes of Ethics have begun the journey of recognising the importance of cultural safety in ensuring good health outcomes for Australia's Indigenous peoples, there is broad scope for change. What are the implications for practitioners? The gaps identified in this analysis provide a roadmap for improvement and inclusion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health and cultural safety as a required standard in Codes of Conduct and Codes of Ethics for all registered health practitioners. Although it is recognised that Codes alone may not change hearts and minds, codifying the clinical competency of cultural safety provides a portal, and a requirement, for each individual practitioner to engage meaningfully and take responsibility to improve practice individually and organisationally.
目的 医疗从业者的行为准则和道德规范在多个领域阐明了实践标准,包括文化安全领域。作为推动个体实践和系统改革的关键工具,准则对于改善澳大利亚原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民的健康结果至关重要。因此,其内容必须明确有意义的文化安全标准,作为机构和个人实践的规范。本研究评估了所有与文化安全特定内容相关的准则。
方法 在澳大利亚健康从业者监管机构(Ahpra)发布 2020-25 年卫生和文化安全战略之后,对 16 个 Ahpra 注册健康从业者委员会的行为准则和专业道德规范进行了分析,比较内容与 Ahpra 的新文化安全目标。两个行为准则,护理和助产,符合这些目标。《土著和托雷斯海峡岛民卫生从业者准则》部分符合这些目标。
结果 大多数行为准则(16 个中的 14 个)将澳大利亚原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民与文化和语言多样化(CALD)社区混为一谈,破坏了澳大利亚第一民族的主权。11 个专业领域有道德规范,包括物理治疗行为准则,其中概述了与道德规范通常相关的实践价值观和道德原则。在有道德规范的 11 个专业领域中,有两个(药学和心理学)明确规定了对第一民族的具体道德责任。物理疗法通过其和解行动计划(RAP)单独概述了文化安全义务,符合 Ahpra 的所有文化安全目标。其余八个专业领域则倡导一般意义上的尊重文化,而不是具体的尊重澳大利亚原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民的文化。
结论 审查确定了需要改进注册健康专业人员准则的文化安全内容的多个方面,为加强个体和系统实践提供了行动路线图,同时确立了明确的监管标准,以确保文化安全实践成为新的规范。它建议根据 Ahpra 的文化安全战略中概述的目标,对所有专业健康从业者委员会的行为准则和专业道德规范进行系统更新。
主题已知内容? 系统种族主义和文化不安全的工作环境导致澳大利亚原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民的健康结果不佳。它们还导致原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民在卫生工作队伍中的代表性不足,使系统和使用和在其中工作的人缺乏急需的土著知识。创建一个文化安全的医疗保健系统要求所有卫生从业者反思自己的文化背景,以了解个人文化假设对医疗服务提供的积极和消极影响。因此,文化安全方面的能力作为实践的必要标准至关重要,如果要在整个卫生专业人员和最终在澳大利亚整个医疗保健系统中实现广泛、可持续和系统的文化变革。鉴于行为准则和道德规范是确定职业实践实际和道德标准的重要组成部分,因此它们在文化能力方面的内容非常重要。
这篇论文增加了什么? 以前没有进行过这种类型的审查。在 Ahpra 土著和托雷斯海峡岛民卫生战略小组成立、Ahpra 2018 年意向声明发布以及 2019 年土著和托雷斯海峡岛民卫生和文化安全战略计划和和解行动计划发布之后,我们分析了每个注册卫生专业人员的行为准则和道德规范的内容,以寻找符合新的国家文化安全定义的内容和指导。确定了一些改进行为准则和道德规范的机会,以实现意向声明中提出的愿景,包括通过适用国家法律。这项分析为未来的改进提供了一个基准,并证实尽管一些当前的卫生从业者行为准则和道德规范已经开始认识到文化安全在确保澳大利亚土著人民良好健康结果方面的重要性,但仍有很大的改进空间。
这对从业者有什么影响? 本分析中确定的差距为改进和纳入土著和托雷斯海峡岛民健康和文化安全提供了路线图,作为所有注册卫生从业者行为准则和道德规范的必要标准。虽然人们认识到仅靠准则可能无法改变观念,但将文化安全的临床能力编纂起来,为每个个体从业者提供了一个门户,并要求他们个人和组织上认真改善实践。