Perez Sofia Hempelmann, Kakish Isabella, Brass Gregory, MacDonald Kathleen, Mushquash Chris, Iyer Srividya N
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec.
Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec.
J Can Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2024 Jul;33(2):93-130. Epub 2024 Jul 1.
There is an urgent need for culturally and contextually relevant mental health support for First Nations, Inuit and Métis youth.
Our aim was to identify mental health and wellness services that are currently available to Indigenous youth across Canada.
As a first step, we conducted a web-based environmental scan of services tailored to Indigenous youth. Specific factors were examined for each program, including organization type and mission, types of services, and who provides services.
One hundred and seventeen programs were found, with 54% being non-profits and 34% being on-reserve. Four core features were identified. The first was a strengths-based focus, rather than a pathology/deficit-focus, in programs' vision and mission statements, reflected in words like wellness and resilience. The second (87% of included programs) was the integration of mental health services with a range of other services and supports (e.g., health, employment, housing). The third was the provision of land-based programming (in 34% of programs) such as camps or hunting. Such programs were framed as promoting wellness and healing and strengthening identity. The fourth was the role of community members without formal mental health professional training (in 42% of programs), for example, as youth workers or knowledge keepers. This stems not only from the dearth of specialists in many Indigenous settings, but also a valuing of Indigenous knowledge.
These core features in mental health services for Indigenous youth may be promising avenues for communities seeking to strengthen the services they offer to First Nations, Inuit and Métis youth.
迫切需要为原住民、因纽特人和梅蒂斯青年提供与文化和背景相关的心理健康支持。
我们的目标是确定目前加拿大各地原住民青年可获得的心理健康和幸福服务。
第一步,我们对专门为原住民青年量身定制的服务进行了基于网络的环境扫描。对每个项目的具体因素进行了审查,包括组织类型和使命、服务类型以及服务提供者。
共找到117个项目,其中54%为非营利组织,34%位于保留地。确定了四个核心特征。第一个是项目的愿景和使命声明中基于优势的重点,而不是基于病理学/缺陷的重点,体现在诸如幸福和复原力等词语中。第二个(87%的纳入项目)是将心理健康服务与一系列其他服务和支持(如健康、就业、住房)相结合。第三个是提供基于土地的项目(34%的项目),如营地或狩猎。这些项目被视为促进健康和康复以及增强身份认同。第四个是没有接受过正规心理健康专业培训的社区成员的作用(42%的项目),例如作为青年工作者或知识守护者。这不仅源于许多原住民地区缺乏专家,还源于对原住民知识的重视。
这些针对原住民青年的心理健康服务的核心特征,对于寻求加强为原住民、因纽特人和梅蒂斯青年提供的服务的社区来说,可能是有前景的途径。