Oetzel John, Ngawati Renei, Penetito-Hemara Darrio, Puke Tori Te, Henry Akarere, Povaru-Bourne Sulita, Sika-Paotonu Dianne
University of Waikato, Private Bag 3105, Hamilton, 3240, New Zealand.
Te Hotu Manawa Māori trading as Toi Tangata, 9 Kalmia Street, Auckland, 1051, New Zealand.
Implement Sci Commun. 2024 Mar 18;5(1):26. doi: 10.1186/s43058-024-00567-y.
Addressing health inequities that Māori (Indigenous peoples) communities face in New Zealand is a key aim of researchers and practitioners. However, there is limited understanding of the implementation processes and outcomes of health programmes for addressing these inequities. The aim of this study was twofold: (a) to identify correlates of implementation outcomes and (b) to identify facilitators and barriers to implementation effectiveness.
The study involved a concurrent mixed method approach. Through an online survey, 79 participants with experience in implementing a health programme with a Māori community identified outcomes and processes of the programme. Additionally, nine Māori community providers shared their perceptions and experience of facilitators and barriers to implementation effectiveness through an in-depth interview. The quantitative and qualitative findings were integrated to address the aims of the study.
For the first aim, we identified two key outcomes: overall health impacts and sustainability. Three of the variables had significant and positive bivariate correlations with health impacts: cultural alignment, community engagement, and individual skills. The only significant correlate of sustainability was evidence-based. For the second aim, participants described four facilitators (leadership, whanaungatanga [relationships], sharing information, digestible information) and four barriers (system constraints, lack of funding, cultural constraints, lack of engagement) to effective implementation.
Overall, leadership, aligning culture, and building on whanaungatanga, while getting financial resources and systems support, are the core elements to supporting implementation efforts in Māori communities.
解决新西兰毛利人(原住民)社区面临的健康不平等问题是研究人员和从业者的一个关键目标。然而,对于旨在解决这些不平等问题的健康项目的实施过程和结果,人们了解有限。本研究的目的有两个:(a)确定实施结果的相关因素,以及(b)确定实施有效性的促进因素和障碍。
本研究采用了同步混合方法。通过在线调查,79名有与毛利社区实施健康项目经验的参与者确定了该项目的结果和过程。此外,9名毛利社区提供者通过深入访谈分享了他们对实施有效性的促进因素和障碍的看法及经验。对定量和定性研究结果进行整合,以实现研究目的。
对于第一个目标,我们确定了两个关键结果:总体健康影响和可持续性。其中三个变量与健康影响存在显著正相关:文化契合度、社区参与度和个人技能。可持续性的唯一显著相关因素是基于证据的。对于第二个目标,参与者描述了有效实施的四个促进因素(领导力、whanaungatanga[关系]、信息共享、易于理解的信息)和四个障碍(系统限制、资金缺乏、文化限制、缺乏参与)。
总体而言,领导力、文化契合以及基于whanaungatanga建立关系,同时获得财政资源和系统支持,是支持毛利社区实施工作的核心要素。