Antony Celina, Campbell Madison, Côté Stephanie, Bruno Grant, Tinglin Carolyn, Lai Jonathan
Department of Health Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
Autism Alliance of Canada, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Front Psychiatry. 2022 Sep 15;13:916256. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.916256. eCollection 2022.
In Canada, most services for Autistic people are provided by provincial and territorial governments. However, support for Indigenous Peoples (First Nations, Inuit, and Métis) are under federal responsibility and are outlined by a set of treaties and agreements with the Crown and a few regional governments. This patchwork results in barriers in service access and navigation challenges in many under-resourced communities, including under-diagnosis and potentially life-threatening outcomes. Designing equitable policy structures and processes would reduce harms and meaningfully interface with Indigenous and other racialized communities. The objective of this Policy Practice Review is to provide a framework for the discovery of appropriate care strategies addressing the conceptualization of autism in Indigenous Peoples and to understand the interactions between racialized Autistic peoples and the Criminal Justice System. First, we conducted environmental scans of publicly-accessible government services available in Canada pertaining to autism in Indigenous communities and the justice system, and explored the dissonance with beliefs and perceptions of autism in Northern Indigenous communities. Second, we focused on the interactions of Indigenous and other racialized populations, with an emphasis on Autistic children and youth with the justice system, an interaction that is often life-altering, downstream, and detrimental to health and wellbeing. The implications of this work include identifying the need for Indigenous-led knowledge and policy recommendations for Canada's upcoming National Autism Strategy, informing the need for culturally appropriate multidisciplinary care and facilitating the coordination between health and social services for these communities.
在加拿大,为自闭症患者提供的大多数服务由省级和地区政府提供。然而,对原住民(第一民族、因纽特人和梅蒂斯人)的支持由联邦政府负责,并由与王室及一些地区政府签订的一系列条约和协议加以概述。这种拼凑的情况导致在许多资源不足的社区出现服务获取障碍和导航挑战,包括诊断不足以及可能危及生命的后果。设计公平的政策结构和流程将减少危害,并与原住民和其他种族化社区进行有意义的互动。本政策实践审查的目的是提供一个框架,以发现针对原住民自闭症概念化的适当护理策略,并了解种族化自闭症患者与刑事司法系统之间的相互作用。首先,我们对加拿大公开可得的与原住民社区自闭症及司法系统相关的政府服务进行了环境扫描,并探讨了与北方原住民社区对自闭症的信念和认知之间的不一致。其次,我们关注原住民和其他种族化人群的互动,重点是自闭症儿童和青少年与司法系统的互动,这种互动往往会改变人生轨迹,产生下游影响,对健康和福祉有害。这项工作的意义包括确定加拿大即将出台的国家自闭症战略需要由原住民主导的知识和政策建议,表明需要提供符合文化的多学科护理,并促进这些社区的卫生和社会服务之间的协调。