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Understanding barriers to health care access through cultural safety and ethical space: Indigenous people's experiences in Prince George, Canada

机译:通过文化安全和道德空间理解医疗保健的障碍:土着人民在加拿大王子的经历

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Almost 1.7 million people in the settler colonial nation of Canada identify as Indigenous. Approximately 52 per cent of Indigenous peoples in Canada live in urban areas. In spite of high rates of urbanization, urban Indigenous peoples are overlooked in health care policy and services. Because of this, although health care services are more plentiful in cities as compared to rural areas, Indigenous people still report significant barriers to health care access in urban settings. This qualitative study, undertaken in Prince George, Canada, examines perceived barriers to health care access for urban Indigenous people in light of how colonialism impacts Indigenous peoples in their everyday lives. The three most frequently reported barriers to health care access on the part of the 65 participating health care providers and Indigenous clients of health care services are: substandard quality of care; long wait times; and experiences of racism and discrimination. These barriers, some of which are common complaints among the general population in Canada, are interpreted by Indigenous clients in unique ways rooted in experiences of discrimination and exclusion that stem from the settler colonial context of the nation. Through the lenses of cultural safety and ethical space frameworks developed by international Indigenous scholars in efforts to better understand and operationalize relationships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous individuals and societies in the context of settler colonialism this study offers an understanding of these barriers in light of the specific ways that colonialism intrudes into Indigenous clients' access to care on an everyday basis.
机译:加拿大定居者殖民地国家的近170万人认为是土着。加拿大约有52%的土着人民住在城市地区。尽管城市化率高,所以城市土着人民被忽视了医疗保健政策和服务。因此,虽然与农村地区相比,卫生保健服务在城市更丰富,但土着人民仍然向城市环境中的医疗保健机构报告了重大障碍。这项定性研究在加拿大王子,鉴于殖民主义如何在日常生活中对土着人民影响着土着人民来检查城市土着人民的医疗保健访问的障碍。 65名参与的医疗保健提供者和土着保健服务客户的卫生保健访问的三个最常见的障碍是:不合标准的护理质量;等待时间;以及种族主义和歧视的经历。这些障碍,其中一些是加拿大一般人群中的常见投诉,被土着客户以独特的方式解释,这些客户根源于歧视和排斥的经验,这些方式源于国家的定居者殖民地背景。通过国际土着学者开发的文化安全和道德空间框架的镜片,以便在定居者殖民主义背景下更好地了解和运作土着和非土着个人和社会之间的关系本研究为这些障碍的理解提供了理解殖民主义侵入土着客户的特定方式,每天都会进入护理。

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