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“I’m outta here!”: a qualitative investigation into why Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people self-discharge from hospital

机译:“我离开这里!”:对原住民和非原住民从医院自放电的原住民和非原住民的定性调查

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Occasions of self-discharge from health services before being seen by a health profession or against medical advice are often used by health systems as an indicator of quality care. People self-discharge because of factors such as dissatisfaction with care, poor communication, long waiting times, and feeling better in addition to external factors such as family and employment responsibilities. These factors, plus a lack of cultural safety, and interpersonal and institutional racism contribute to the disproportionately higher rates of Indigenous people self-discharging from hospital. This qualitative study aimed to increase understanding about the causative and contextual factors that culminate in people self-discharging and identify opportunities to improve the hospital experience for all. Semi-structured interviews with five Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander (hereafter, respectfully, Indigenous) people and six non-Indigenous people who had self-discharged from a major tertiary hospital in Brisbane, Australia, were audio-recorded, transcribed and thematically analysed. Study participants all respected hospitals’ vital role of caring for the sick, but the cumulative impact of unmet needs created a tipping point whereby they concluded that remaining in hospital would compromise their health and wellbeing. Five key categories of unmet needs were identified – the need for information; confidence in the quality of care; respectful treatment; basic comforts; and peace of mind. Although Indigenous and non-Indigenous participants had similar unmet needs, for the former, the deleterious impact of unmet needs was compounded by racist and discriminatory behaviours they experienced while in hospital. Respectful, empathetic, person-centred care is likely to result in patients’ needs being met, improve the hospital experience and reduce the risk of people self-discharging. For Indigenous people, the ongoing legacy of white colonisation is embodied in everyday lived experiences of interpersonal and institutional racism. Racist and discriminatory behaviours experienced whilst hospitalised are thus rendered both more visible and more traumatic, and exacerbate the deleterious effect of unmet needs. Decreasing self-discharge events requires a shift of thinking away from perceiving this as the behaviour of a deviant individual, but rather as a quality improvement opportunity to ensure that all patients are cared for in a respectful and person-centred manner.
机译:在卫生专业或反对医学建议之前,卫生系统常用在卫生服务前的自我放电场合作为质量护理的指标。由于家庭和就业责任等外部因素,人们对诸如照顾,沟通,等待时间较差的因素,因此人们自放电。这些因素,加上缺乏文化安全,人际关系和机构种族主义促进了从医院自我排放的土着人民不成比例地提高的。这种定性研究旨在提高对致病性和上下文因素的理解,这些因素达到人们自放电,确定改善所有人的医院经验的机会。有五个原住民和/或托雷斯海峡岛屿(以下,从澳大利亚Brisbane的主要高等教育医院自给自足,澳大利亚布里斯班的主要医院有六个非土着人员进行了录音,转录和主题分析。研究参与者所有尊重的医院对病人的关注作用,但未满足的需求的累积影响创造了一个小费,他们得出结论,剩下的医院会妥协他们的健康和健康。确定了五个关键类别的未满足需求 - 需要信息;对护理质量的信心;尊重治疗;基本舒适;和安心。虽然土着和非本土参与者具有相似的未满足需求,但对于前者来说,未满足需求的有害影响受到在医院中经历的种族主义和歧视行为的复杂化。尊重,同情,以人为本的护理可能导致患者的需求,提高医院经验,降低人们自放电的风险。对于土着人来说,白殖民化的正在进行的遗产是体现的人际关系和制度种族主义的日常生活经验。因此,在住院治疗的种族主义和歧视行为,因此变得更加明显和更具创伤,加剧了未满足需求的有害效果。减少自我放电事件需要将思维的转变作为识别这种情况,作为偏差人的行为,而是作为质量改进机会,以确保所有患者以尊重和以人为本的方式照顾。

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