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Measuring organisational-level Aboriginal cultural climate to tailor cultural safety strategies

机译:测量组织一级的土著文化氛围,以量身定制文化安全策略

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Introduction:Australian medical schools have taken on a social accountability mandate to provide culturally safe contexts in order to encourage Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people to engage in medical education and to ensure that present and future clinicians provide health services that contribute to improving the health outcomes of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.?Many programs have sought to improve cultural safety through training at an individual level; however, it is well recognised that learners tend to internalise the patterns of behaviour to which they are commonly exposed. This project aimed to measure and reflect on the cultural climate of an Australian rural clinical school (RCS) as a whole and the collective attitudes of three different professional groups: clinicians, clinical academics and professional staff. The project then drew on Mezirow's Transformative Learning theory to design strategies to build on the cultural safety of the organisation.Methods:Clinicians, academic and professional staff at an Australian RCS were invited to participate in an online survey expressing their views on Aboriginal health using part of a previously validated tool.Results:Survey response rate was 63%. All three groups saw Aboriginal health as a social priority. All groups recognised the fundamental role of community control in Aboriginal health; however, clinical academics were considerably more likely to disagree that the Western medical model suited the health needs of Aboriginal people. Clinicians were more likely to perceive that they treated Aboriginal patients the same as other patients. There was only weak evidence of future commitments to Aboriginal health. Importantly, clinicians, academics and professional staff demonstrated differences in their cultural safety profile which indicated the need for a tailored approach to cultural safety learning in the future.Conclusions:Through tailored approaches to cross-cultural training opportunities we are likely to ensure participants are able to engage with the material and reflect upon implications of a challenging cultural climate on the health and wellbeing outcomes of Aboriginal people.
机译:简介:澳大利亚医学院接受了社会责任制,提供文化上安全的环境,以鼓励原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民参加医学教育,并确保当前和将来的临床医生提供有助于改善健康结果的健康服务许多方案都试图通过个人培训来改善文化安全。然而,众所周知的是,学习者倾向于内化他们通常面临的行为模式。该项目旨在衡量和反思整个澳大利亚农村临床学校(RCS)的文化氛围以及三个不同专业团体的集体态度:临床医生,临床学者和专业员工。然后,该项目借鉴了Mezirow的``变革性学习''理论来设计基于组织文化安全的策略。方法:邀请澳大利亚RCS的临床医生,学术人员和专业人员参加在线调查,其中表达了他们对土著健康的看法结果:调查答复率为63%。这三个群体都将原住民健康视为社会优先事项。所有群体都认识到社区控制在原住民健康中的基本作用;但是,临床学者更有可能不同意西方医学模型适合原住民的健康需求。临床医生更有可能认为他们对待原住民患者的方式与其他患者相同。只有很少的证据表明未来对土著健康的承诺。重要的是,临床医生,学者和专业人员在文化安全方面表现出差异,这表明将来需要针对文化安全学习采取量身定制的方法。结论:通过针对跨文化培训机会量身定制的方法,我们很可能确保参与者能够与材料互动,并思考充满挑战的文化气候对原住民健康和福祉的影响。

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