Alaazi Dominic A, Yohani Sophie, Salami Bukola
School of Health Studies, Faculty of Health Sciences, Western University, London, ON, Canada.
Department of Educational Psychology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2024 Sep 20. doi: 10.1007/s40615-024-02175-x.
Canada's Black population has more than doubled over the last two decades, with the fastest growth occurring in the Prairie provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta. Despite a growing interest in Black health research in Canada, there is still limited knowledge on culturally responsive approaches to collecting, analyzing, and reporting health data on Black Canadians. This review presents a synthesis of challenges and strategies for conducting culturally responsive health research in Black communities.
Guided by Arksey and O'Malley's framework [1], this scoping review addresses the questions: What cultural considerations inform health data collection methods with Black Canadians on the Prairies? What gaps exist in current use of culturally appropriate approaches to health research with this population? We systematically searched selected electronic databases-Sociological Abstracts, PsychINFO, Embase, Social Science Citation Index, Social Services Abstract, Social Work Abstracts, CINAHL, Scopus, Medline, Cochrane Library, Proquest, and Web of Science-for studies on Black health in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta. We completed a citation chaining of selected studies, searched thesis repositories, and consulted Black health researchers on the Prairies. Using our inclusion criteria, we screened 453 records and selected 27 articles for the review.
Most of the included articles described research conducted in Alberta (77.7%) and between 2015 and 2022 (74.1%). We identified four themes relevant to culturally responsive approaches to Black health research: use of theory in research design; research leadership; research participation, uptake, and community engagement; and data collection procedures.
Black leadership, critical representation on project teams, and partnerships with community gatekeepers can improve trust, acceptability, and research uptake. Cultural considerations in Black health research include attending to gender, age, and religion in data collection. There is also a need to reform research practices and guidelines to attend to the social, cultural, and religious needs of Black Canadians.
在过去二十年中,加拿大的黑人人口增加了一倍多,其中增长最快的是草原省份马尼托巴省、萨斯喀彻温省和艾伯塔省。尽管加拿大对黑人健康研究的兴趣日益浓厚,但在以文化敏感的方式收集、分析和报告加拿大黑人健康数据方面,知识仍然有限。本综述介绍了在黑人社区开展具有文化敏感性的健康研究的挑战和策略。
在阿克西和奥马利的框架[1]指导下,本范围综述解决了以下问题:在草原地区,哪些文化因素影响了与加拿大黑人健康数据收集方法?在当前对该人群进行的具有文化适宜性的健康研究方法的使用中存在哪些差距?我们系统地搜索了选定的电子数据库——《社会学文摘》、《心理学文摘》、《Embase》、《社会科学引文索引》、《社会服务文摘》、《社会工作文摘》、《护理学与健康领域数据库》、《Scopus》、《医学索引》、《考科蓝图书馆》、《Proquest》和《科学引文索引》——以查找关于马尼托巴省、萨斯喀彻温省和艾伯塔省黑人健康的研究。我们对选定的研究进行了引文链检索,搜索了论文库,并咨询了草原地区的黑人健康研究人员。根据我们的纳入标准,我们筛选了453条记录,并选择了27篇文章进行综述。
大多数纳入的文章描述了2015年至2022年期间在艾伯塔省进行的研究(77.7%)。我们确定了与黑人健康研究的文化敏感方法相关的四个主题:研究设计中理论的使用;研究领导力;研究参与、接受度和社区参与;以及数据收集程序。
黑人领导力、项目团队中的关键代表性以及与社区守门人的伙伴关系可以提高信任度、可接受性和研究接受度。黑人健康研究中的文化考量包括在数据收集中关注性别、年龄和宗教。还需要改革研究实践和指南,以满足加拿大黑人的社会、文化和宗教需求。