Ubrihien Ashley, Gwynne Kylie, Lewis David A
Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Poche Centre for Indigenous Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Pilot Feasibility Stud. 2021 May 13;7(1):106. doi: 10.1186/s40814-021-00847-7.
Aboriginal people face challenges on several fronts when it comes to the health and wellbeing of their community, compared to the rest of the Australian population. This is no different in urban areas such as Australia's largest urban Aboriginal community located in Blacktown, NSW, where sexually transmitted infections (STIs) remain an issue of concern. Across Australia, rates of infectious syphilis, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), and hepatitis C infection have increased by 400, 260, and 15% respectively while gonorrhoea decreased 12% in the 5-year period from 2013 to 2017. This study explores how to address the barriers that prevent young Aboriginal people under 30 years of age from accessing STI treatment through Government Sexual Health Services.
This qualitative study will use purposeful sampling to recruit 20 male and 20 female health consumers, 10 Aboriginal elders and 10 sexual health clinicians. This recruitment will be undertaken with the assistance of the local Government Health Services and local Aboriginal organisations. One-on-one semi-structured interviews will be undertaken by someone of the same gender in order to address cultural preferences. Data will be entered into NVivo and thematically analysed.
This study will seek to add to the literature that explores why young Aboriginal people do not access sexual health services. This study seeks to understand the experience of clinicians, Aboriginal elders and Aboriginal young people to provide practical policy and clinical redesign evidence that can be used to improve the experience and cultural safety of sexual health services in urban areas of Australia. The results of the qualitative research will be disseminated with the assistance of participating local Aboriginal organisations, and the findings will be published through peer-reviewed scientific journals and conference presentations.
The study is approved by the Western Sydney Local Health District Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC/16/WMEAD/449) and the New South Wales Aboriginal Health and Medical Research Council's Human Research Ethics Committee (1220/16).
与澳大利亚其他人口相比,原住民在其社区的健康和福祉方面面临多方面的挑战。在城市地区也是如此,比如位于新南威尔士州布莱克敦的澳大利亚最大的城市原住民社区,性传播感染(STIs)仍是一个令人担忧的问题。在2013年至2017年的5年期间,全澳大利亚的传染性梅毒、人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)和丙型肝炎感染率分别上升了400%、260%和15%,而淋病感染率下降了12%。本研究探讨如何消除阻碍30岁以下原住民青年通过政府性健康服务获得性传播感染治疗的障碍。
这项定性研究将采用目的抽样法,招募20名男性和20名女性健康消费者、10名原住民长者和10名性健康临床医生。招募工作将在当地政府卫生服务机构和当地原住民组织的协助下进行。为了尊重文化偏好,将由同性别的人员进行一对一的半结构化访谈。数据将录入NVivo软件并进行主题分析。
本研究旨在补充探索原住民青年不利用性健康服务原因的文献。本研究旨在了解临床医生、原住民长者和原住民青年的经历,以提供切实可行的政策和临床重新设计依据,用于改善澳大利亚城市地区性健康服务的体验和文化安全性。定性研究的结果将在参与研究的当地原住民组织的协助下进行传播,研究结果将通过同行评审的科学期刊和会议报告予以发表。
该研究已获得西悉尼地方卫生区人类研究伦理委员会(HREC/16/WMEAD/449)和新南威尔士州原住民健康与医学研究理事会人类研究伦理委员会(1220/16)的批准。