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澳大利亚原住民妇女健康社会决定因素对母婴健康服务获取和参与的影响。

The impact of social determinants of health of Australian Indigenous women on access and engagement in maternal child health services.

机构信息

School of Health, Federation University, Ballarat, Victoria, Australia.

出版信息

J Adv Nurs. 2023 May;79(5):1815-1829. doi: 10.1111/jan.15493. Epub 2022 Nov 11.

Abstract

AIMS

To explore the impact of social determinants of health and health outcomes of Australian Indigenous women on their access and engagement in maternal child health services.

DESIGN

A qualitative study, guided by the methodological principles of narrative inquiry integrated with the Indigenous philosophy 'Dadirri', and thematic analysis of the data.

METHODS

Interviews of 35 Aboriginal mothers with children aged birth to 5 years in December 2021, to explore factors that influence their access and engagement in maternal child health services.

RESULTS

Enabling factors that influence access and engagement of Indigenous women in maternal child health services include service models or interventions that are culturally sensitive and effective. Models that recognize the social determinants of health and well-being, are timely, appropriate, culturally strong, flexible, holistic and effective community-based services that support continuity of care and communication and encourage earlier identification of risk and further assessment, intervention, referral and support from the antenatal period to the child's fifth birthday (the first 2000 days), also support access and engagement. Barriers to access and engagement include an ineffective service model built on mistrust and poor communication from cultural differences between client and provider, a lack of continuity of care between services, limited flexibility of service delivery to suit individual needs and a healthcare model that does not recognize the importance of the social determinants of health and well-being.

CONCLUSION

Nurses' understanding of Indigenous culture, and the impact of the social determinants of health and health outcomes on the well-being of Indigenous women, is critical to improve their access and engagement in maternal child health services.

IMPACT

The findings of this research support the benefit of models or interventions that recognize the interactions and effects of the social determinants of health and health outcomes of Indigenous women and their healthcare access.

PATIENT OR PUBLIC CONTRIBUTION

Data from Indigenous mothers residing in the Glenelg Shire with at least one child aged birth to 5 years were collected through face-to-face, in-depth semi-structured discussion ('yarning') at the Dhauwurd Wurrung Elderly and Community Health Service and the Winda-Mara Aboriginal Corporation Aboriginal and Community Controlled Health Organizations (ACCHO's) in December 2021, co-facilitated by key staff from the ACCHO's. To ensure cultural safety and an Indigenous lens to the research, consultation with traditional owners residing in the Glenelg Shire was sourced to assist with the development of the research guide and to develop interview questions. A panel of experts was then consulted to clarify the relevance and clarity of each question/discussion prompt on the indicative interview schedule and establish face validity. The panel of experts comprised of the research project team, an experienced Maternal and Child Health (MCH) nurse researcher and key representatives from the Victorian Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organization (VACCHO) and the ACCHO sites. A small number of the target group, independent of the research, piloted the questions. Any valid suggestions from the expert panel and pilot testing were incorporated into the interview schedule design and clarifications were made to the questions/prompts where appropriate. Following full approval of the research, the Chief Executive Officers (CEO's) of the two ACCHO's were provided with an overview of the project and timeframes, and an Indigenous employee within each ACCHO was appointed by the CEO as a 'site coordinator' to act as the chief point of contact with the project team and assist with recruitment of discussion participants. Women who met the inclusion criteria were then invited to participate in the research. To ensure procedural and interpretative rigour, and to gain a deeper, comprehensive insight and understanding of First Nation women's access and engagement in MCH Services, the ACCHO Site Coordinators, key staff from VACCHO and an Indigenous academic consultant with research experience interviewing Indigenous mothers in 'the first 1000 days' of their child's life, also participated in the analysis of the data.

摘要

目的

探讨澳大利亚原住民妇女的社会决定因素和健康结果对其获得和参与母婴保健服务的影响。

设计

一项定性研究,以叙事探究的方法论原则为指导,结合原住民哲学“Dadirri”,以及对数据的主题分析。

方法

2021 年 12 月对 35 名年龄在出生至 5 岁之间的孩子的土著母亲进行了访谈,以探讨影响她们获得和参与母婴保健服务的因素。

结果

影响土著妇女获得和参与母婴保健服务的有利因素包括文化敏感和有效的服务模式或干预措施。这些模式认识到健康和福祉的社会决定因素,是及时、适当、文化强大、灵活、全面和有效的基于社区的服务,支持从产前到孩子五岁生日(前 2000 天)的连续护理和沟通,并鼓励及早发现风险并进一步评估、干预、转介和支持,也支持获得和参与。获得和参与的障碍包括基于客户和提供者之间的文化差异的不信任和沟通不畅的无效服务模式、服务之间连续性护理的缺乏、服务提供的有限灵活性以适应个人需求以及不承认健康和福祉的社会决定因素的重要性的医疗保健模式。

结论

护士对原住民文化的理解,以及社会决定因素和健康结果对原住民妇女福祉的影响,对于改善她们获得和参与母婴保健服务至关重要。

影响

这项研究的结果支持认可妇女和她们的医疗保健获得的社会决定因素的相互作用和影响的模式或干预措施的益处。

患者或公众贡献

收集了居住在格伦艾尔格郡、至少有一个 5 岁以下孩子的土著母亲的数据,方法是由 ACCHO 的主要工作人员共同主持,在 2021 年 12 月在 Dhauwurd Wurrung 老年人和社区卫生服务以及 Winda-Mara 原住民和社区控制的卫生组织(ACCHO)进行面对面的深入半结构化讨论(“yarning”)。为了确保文化安全和原住民视角的研究,从居住在格伦艾尔格郡的传统所有者那里获得了咨询,以协助研究指南的开发,并制定访谈问题。然后咨询了一个专家小组,以澄清指示性访谈时间表上每个问题/讨论提示的相关性和清晰度,并确定表面效度。专家小组成员包括研究项目团队、一位经验丰富的母婴保健(MCH)护士研究员,以及 VACCHO 和 ACCHO 现场的主要代表。目标群体中的一小部分人,独立于研究,对问题进行了试点测试。专家小组和试点测试的任何有效建议都被纳入访谈时间表设计,并在适当的情况下对问题/提示进行了澄清。在项目获得全面批准后,两个 ACCHO 的首席执行官(CEOs)提供了项目概述和时间表,每个 ACCHO 内部的一名土著员工被 CEO 任命为“现场协调员”,作为与项目团队的主要联络人,并协助招聘讨论参与者。符合纳入标准的妇女随后被邀请参加研究。为了确保程序和解释的严谨性,并深入、全面地了解原住民妇女获得和参与母婴保健服务的情况,ACCHO 现场协调员、VACCHO 的主要工作人员以及一位具有在孩子生命的“前 1000 天”中采访原住民母亲经验的原住民学术顾问,也参与了数据分析。

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