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Virtual Care for Indigenous Populations in Canada, the United States, Australia, and New Zealand: Protocol for a Scoping Review

机译:加拿大,美国,澳大利亚和新西兰的土着人口的虚拟护理:审查的议定书

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Background Indigenous people in Canada, the United States, Australia, and New Zealand experience an increased burden of chronic diseases compared to non-Indigenous people in these countries. Lack of necessary services and culturally relevant care for Indigenous people contributes to this burden. Many Indigenous communities have implemented systems, such as virtual care, to improve chronic disease management. Virtual care has extended beyond videoconferencing to include more advanced technologies, such as remote biometric monitoring devices. However, given the historical and ongoing Western intrusion into Indigenous day to day life, these technologies may seem more invasive and thus require additional research on their acceptability and utility within Indigenous populations. Objective The objective of this paper is to present the protocol for a scoping review, which aims to map existing evidence. This study is based on the following guiding research question: What are the characteristics of virtual care use by Indigenous adult populations in Canada, the United States, Australia, and New Zealand? The subquestions are related to the technology used, health conditions and nature of the virtual care, cultural safety, and key concepts for effective use. Methods This scoping review protocol is informed by the methodology described by the Joanna Briggs Institute and is supplemented by the frameworks proposed by Arksey and O’Malley and Levac et al. A search for published and gray literature, written in English, and published between 2000 and present will be completed utilizing electronic databases and search engines, including MEDLINE, CINAHL, Embase, Indigenous Peoples of North America, Australian Indigenous HealthInfoNet, Informit, and Native Health Database. Search results will be uploaded to the review software, Covidence, for title and abstract screening before full-text screening begins. This process will be repeated for gray literature. Upon completion, a data abstraction tool will organize the relevant information into categorical formations. Results The search strategy has been confirmed, and the screening of titles and abstracts is underway. As of October 2020, we have identified over 300 articles for full-text screening. Conclusions Previous reviews have addressed virtual care within Indigenous communities. However, new virtual care technologies have since emerged; subsequently, additional literature has been published. Mapping and synthesizing this literature will inform new directions for research and discussion. International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID) PRR1-10.2196/21860
机译:与这些国家的非土着人相比,加拿大的土着人民在加拿大,美国,澳大利亚和新西兰经历了慢性疾病的负担。对土着人民缺乏必要的服务和文化相关的关怀促进了这一负担。许多土着社区已经实施了诸如虚拟护理的系统,以提高慢性疾病管理。虚拟护理扩展了超出视频会议,包括更多先进的技术,例如远程生物识别监控设备。然而,鉴于历史和正在进行的西方入侵土着日常生活,这些技术似乎更具侵入性,因此需要额外的研究土着人群内的可接受性和效用。目的本文的目的是介绍审查的议定书,旨在映射现有证据。本研究基于以下指导研究问题:加拿大,美国,澳大利亚和新西兰的土着成年人口的虚拟护理用途是什么?子标语与虚拟护理,文化安全和有效使用的关键概念的使用,健康状况和性质有关。方法采用joanna briggs Institute所描述的方法,并由Arksey和O'Malley和Levac等人提出的框架补充了该范围审查协议。搜索以英语编写的发布和灰色文献,并在2000年间发布于2000年和出现的情况下,将利用电子数据库和搜索引擎,包括北美的Medline,Cinahl,Embase,土着人民,澳大利亚土着健康,信息,信息和本土健康数据库。在全文筛选开始之前,搜索结果将上传到审查软件,Covidence,用于标题和抽象筛选。这个过程将重复灰色文学。完成后,数据抽象工具将将相关信息组织成分类的结构。结果已确认搜索策略,并正在进行筛选标题和摘要。截至2020年10月,我们已经确定了300多篇文章筛查文章。结论以前的评论已经解决了土着社区内的虚拟护理。但是,新的虚拟护理技术出现了;随后,发表了额外的文献。映射和综合这种文献将为研究和讨论提供新的路线。国际注册报告标识符(ISHRID)PRR1-10.2196 / 21860

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