Brain injury, resulting from stroke and traumatic brain injury, is a common occurrence in Australia, with Aboriginal people affected at a significant rate and impact felt by individuals, families and communities. Access to brain injury rehabilitation services for Aboriginal people is reported to be often limited, with very little support outside the hospital environment. Our research involving Aboriginal brain injury survivors and their families to date has revealed that people often manage ‘on their own’ following such events. Following recommendations from survivors and their families, the Healing Right Way clinical trial, currently underway in Western Australia, has created the role of Aboriginal Brain Injury Coordinator (ABIC) to assist in navigating information and services, particularly after discharge from hospital. Eight positions for this role have been instigated across metropolitan and rural regions in the state. Healing Right Way’s aim is to enhance rehabilitation services and improve quality of life for Aboriginal Australians after brain injury. The ABIC’s role is to provide education, support, liaison and advocacy services to participants and their families over a six-month period, commencing soon after the participant’s stroke or injury has occurred. This paper outlines the development of this role, the partnerships involved, experiences to date and identifies some facilitators and barriers encountered that may impact the role’s ongoing sustainability. Details of components of the planned full Process Evaluation of Healing Right Way related to the ABIC role and the partnerships surrounding it are also provided. In combination with the trial’s ultimate results, this detail will assist in future service planning and provide a model of culturally secure care for stroke and brain injury services that can also inform other sub-acute and primary care models.
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机译:由中风和创伤性脑损伤引起的脑损伤在澳大利亚很常见,原住民受到影响的比率很高,个人、家庭和社区都会感受到影响。据报道,原住民获得脑损伤康复服务的机会往往有限,在医院环境之外几乎没有支持。迄今为止,我们对原住民脑损伤幸存者及其家人的研究显示,人们通常会在此类事件发生后“自行”管理。根据幸存者及其家人的建议,目前正在西澳大利亚州进行的 Healing Right Way 临床试验设立了原住民脑损伤协调员 (ABIC) 的角色,以协助获取信息和服务,尤其是在出院后。该州的大都市和农村地区已设立了八个职位。Healing Right Way 的目标是加强康复服务并改善脑损伤后澳大利亚原住民的生活质量。ABIC 的职责是在参与者中风或受伤后不久开始,在六个月内为参与者及其家人提供教育、支持、联络和宣传服务。本文概述了该角色的发展、所涉及的合作伙伴关系、迄今为止的经验,并确定了可能影响该角色持续可持续性的一些促进因素和遇到的障碍。还提供了与 ABIC 角色相关的 Healing Right Way 计划的完整流程评估的组成部分以及围绕它的合作伙伴关系的详细信息。结合试验的最终结果,这一细节将有助于未来的服务规划,并为中风和脑损伤服务提供一种文化安全的护理模式,该模式也可以为其他亚急性和初级保健模式提供信息。
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