Department of Family and Emergency Medicine, Université de Sherbrooke, Chicoutimi, Quebec, Canada
Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de services sociaux du Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean du Québec, Chicoutimi, Quebec, Canada.
Fam Med Community Health. 2022 May;10(Suppl 1). doi: 10.1136/fmch-2022-001606.
Chronic conditions represent an important source of major health issues among Indigenous People. The same applies to those, who live off-reserve and in urban areas. However, very few healthcare services are considered culturally safe, resulting in some avoidance of the public healthcare system. Our goal was to review the literature on culturally safe practices available to urban Indigenous People who suffer from chronic diseases.
We conducted a scoping review to determine what culturally safe healthcare services are currently offered for the management of chronic conditions in urban Indigenous populations, to contribute to a tailored, holistic and safe space in mainstream healthcare systems.
Peer-reviewed original research articles had to be published by 27 October 2020, in English or French.
In October 2020, we searched five academic databases (EBSCO, PsycArticles, SocINDEX, MEDLINE and PsycINFO) and also reviewed grey literature and the websites of organisations or governments. The data were extracted and collected in an EXCEL spreadsheet. Two reviewers independently screened 326 titles and abstracts, followed by an independent evaluation of 48 full text articles. A total of 19 studies were included in this scoping review, as well as 5 websites/documents from the grey literature.
In total, 19 studies were included in our analysis. We found that Elders, family and the assistance of an interpreter are crucial elements to include to make urban Indigenous feel safe when they seek healthcare services. With this scoping review, we report interventions that are successful in terms of healthcare delivery for this population. Our findings provide insight on what services should be in place in mainstream healthcare settings to create a culturally safe experience for urban Indigenous People.
In recent years, there appears to be a growing awareness of the need to provide culturally safe health services. This scoping review identified multiple strategies to promote cultural safety in this context, as well as barriers and facilitators to their implementation. These elements, which have been extensively documented in the literature, should be included in the chronic diseases management interventions to be developed by urban and primary care settings.
慢性病是原住民主要健康问题的重要来源。居住在保留地外和城市地区的人也是如此。然而,能够被认为是文化安全的医疗保健服务非常少,这导致一些人回避公共医疗保健系统。我们的目标是审查有关为患有慢性病的城市原住民提供的文化安全实践的文献。
我们进行了范围界定审查,以确定目前在主流医疗保健系统中为城市原住民慢性病管理提供哪些文化安全的医疗保健服务,以促进量身定制、整体和安全的空间。
必须在 2020 年 10 月 27 日之前以英文或法文发表同行评审的原始研究文章。
2020 年 10 月,我们搜索了五个学术数据库(EBSCO、PsycArticles、SocINDEX、MEDLINE 和 PsycINFO),并审查了灰色文献以及组织或政府的网站。数据在 EXCEL 电子表格中提取和收集。两名审查员独立筛选了 326 篇标题和摘要,然后独立评估了 48 篇全文文章。共有 19 项研究被纳入本范围界定审查,以及灰色文献中的 5 个网站/文件。
共有 19 项研究被纳入我们的分析。我们发现,长者、家庭和口译员的帮助是让城市原住民在寻求医疗保健服务时感到安全的关键因素。通过这项范围界定审查,我们报告了在为这一人群提供医疗服务方面取得成功的干预措施。我们的研究结果提供了有关主流医疗保健环境中应提供哪些服务以为城市原住民创造文化安全体验的见解。
近年来,人们似乎越来越意识到需要提供文化安全的医疗服务。本范围界定审查确定了多种策略,可以在这种情况下促进文化安全,以及实施这些策略的障碍和促进因素。这些在文献中广泛记录的要素应包含在城市和初级保健环境中制定的慢性病管理干预措施中。