Zhang Tayah, Bath Brenna, McKinney Veronica, Swidrovich Jaris, Johnson Rachel, Foulds Heather, Makar Nadia, Montgrand Melanie, Lovo Stacey
College of Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada.
School of Rehabilitation Science, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada.
Can J Pain. 2024 Dec 6;8(2):2412560. doi: 10.1080/24740527.2024.2412560. eCollection 2024.
Chronic musculoskeletal (MSK) pain disproportionately affects Indigenous Peoples, and rural/remote communities face significant barriers in accessing care. La Loche, a Dene/Métis community in northern Saskatchewan, has limited access to specialized chronic pain management services and specialized health providers.
The aim of this needs assessment was to gain insight into the community's priorities, strengths, and concerns regarding chronic MSK pain management. Community engagement and relationship building were essential to ensure that cultural protocols were respected and community worldviews were accurately represented.
A community-directed needs assessment was conducted in collaboration with local health care providers and community members. To ensure appropriate representation of community-led priorities, reflexive thematic analysis was utilized and rooted within interpretive description and informed by community-based participatory research and Two-Eyed Seeing. Open discussions were conducted in person, over the phone, or via Zoom in a semistructured format. Thirteen individuals were interviewed (eight community members, five health care professionals).
Interviews conducted with community members and health care providers were analyzed separately. Both yielded the same four major overarching themes: (1) impact of pain on daily living, (2) barriers limiting access to care and the understanding of pain between health care provider and patient, (3) systemic oppression and negative experiences with health care, and (4) strength-based solutions.
Five recommendations were developed to promote culturally safe and patient-centered environments for chronic MSK pain communication and future care delivery: (1) person-centered and community-directed care, (2) clinic model and staffing requirements, (3) practitioner education and awareness, (4) community education and awareness, and (5) community resources.
慢性肌肉骨骼疼痛对原住民的影响尤为严重,农村/偏远社区在获得护理方面面临重大障碍。萨斯喀彻温省北部的迪内/梅蒂斯社区拉洛什,获得专业慢性疼痛管理服务和专业医疗服务提供者的机会有限。
本次需求评估的目的是深入了解社区在慢性肌肉骨骼疼痛管理方面的优先事项、优势和关切。社区参与和关系建立对于确保文化规范得到尊重以及准确反映社区世界观至关重要。
与当地医疗服务提供者和社区成员合作开展了一项以社区为导向的需求评估。为确保社区主导的优先事项得到适当体现,采用了反思性主题分析,该分析扎根于解释性描述,并以基于社区的参与性研究和双眼审视为依据。通过面对面、电话或Zoom以半结构化形式进行了开放式讨论。共采访了13人(8名社区成员、5名医疗专业人员)。
分别对社区成员和医疗服务提供者进行的访谈进行了分析。两者都得出了相同的四个主要总体主题:(1)疼痛对日常生活的影响,(2)限制获得护理以及医疗服务提供者与患者之间对疼痛理解的障碍,(3)系统性压迫和医疗保健方面的负面经历,(4)基于优势的解决方案。
提出了五项建议,以促进在慢性肌肉骨骼疼痛沟通和未来护理提供方面建立具有文化安全性和以患者为中心的环境:(1)以人为本和以社区为导向的护理,(2)诊所模式和人员配备要求,(3)从业者教育和意识,(4)社区教育和意识,(5)社区资源。