Harris Rachel, Kolahdooz Fariba, Omidimorad Afsaneh, Wagg Adrian, Gotay Carolyn, DeLancey Debbie, Kandola Kami, Corriveau André, Pirkola Sami, Rautio Arja, Irlbacher-Fox Stephanie, Sharma Sangita
Indigenous and Global Health Research Group, Department of Medicine, College of Health Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
Division of Geriatric Medicine, Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry, College of Health Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
J Community Health. 2025 Apr;50(2):218-226. doi: 10.1007/s10900-024-01366-1. Epub 2024 Oct 14.
The aim of this project is to explore perceptions towards and adherence to COVID-19 public health preventive measures in Indigenous communities within Northwest Territories, Canada. Utilizing a cross-sectional study design the project took place within ten Northwest Territories communities between 1st April and 30th November 2021. Convenience sampling methods were utilized and adhered to public health restrictions. Self-identifying Indigenous adults (≥ 18 years old) were invited to complete a semi-structured interviewer-administered questionnaire. Participants (n = 287; 33.1% men, 66.6% women) had a mean age of 41.6 years (SD ± 13.5). Preventive measures were practiced by 98.6% of participants. Most participants reported often or always practicing three measures: avoiding gatherings (67.2%), avoiding usual greetings (63.3%), and limiting contact with high-risk individuals (71.4%). Most participants reported rarely/never practicing self-isolation (67.5%) and self-quarantining (76.5%) measures. Significant associations existed between the August 2021 COVID-19 outbreak and self-quarantining (p = 0.0023), self-isolating (p = 0.0023), and going onto the land (p = 0.0001). Participants found masking and travel restrictions challenging. Sadness and loneliness resulted from limited access to Elders. Kinship and community safety were important to Indigenous community members and influenced COVID-19 preventive measure utilization. The findings can inform culturally specific COVID-19 public health policy development.
本项目旨在探索加拿大西北地区原住民社区对新冠疫情公共卫生预防措施的认知及遵守情况。该项目采用横断面研究设计,于2021年4月1日至11月30日在西北地区的10个社区开展。采用便利抽样方法,并遵守公共卫生限制规定。邀请自我认定为原住民的成年人(≥18岁)完成一份由访谈员管理的半结构化问卷。参与者(n = 287;男性占33.1%,女性占66.6%)的平均年龄为41.6岁(标准差±13.5)。98.6%的参与者采取了预防措施。大多数参与者报告经常或总是采取三种措施:避免聚集(67.2%)、避免常规问候(63.3%)以及限制与高风险个体接触(71.4%)。大多数参与者报告很少/从不采取自我隔离(67.5%)和自我检疫(76.5%)措施。2021年8月的新冠疫情爆发与自我检疫(p = 0.0023)、自我隔离(p = 0.0023)以及前往户外(p = 0.0001)之间存在显著关联。参与者认为戴口罩和旅行限制具有挑战性。因与长辈接触受限而产生悲伤和孤独情绪。亲属关系和社区安全对原住民社区成员很重要,并影响了新冠疫情预防措施的实施。这些研究结果可为制定针对特定文化背景的新冠疫情公共卫生政策提供参考。