Cultural safe healthcare initiatives, implementations, and recommendations, for Indigenous peoples of Canada: a systematic review

Paige Stevenson, Joshua K. Tobias
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Abstract

The health of Indigenous peoples across Canada continues to be significantly impacted by experiences of racism when seeking healthcare. Implementing cultural safety was identified by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada as a critical way to mitigate these negative health consequences. This systematic review aims to outline cultural safety and its associated derivatives in academia, what cultural safety is, and why it is important in the context of indigenous healthcare. A systematic search of PubMed was carried out refining searches to Canadian contexts, published after December of 2015, and limited to peer-reviewed reviews and systematic reviews. A thematic review of the articles identified four central ideas of importance regarding the information presented in the papers; definitions of cultural safety and associated derivatives, the importance of including culture in healthcare, recommendations to healthcare settings, and evaluation methods of cultural safety initiatives. It is clear that there is a need for an explicit and consistent definition of cultural safety with the inclusion of Indigenous peoples in the creation of this definition. To determine effectiveness, gaps and areas for improvement, evaluation methods inclusive of the unique Indigenous worldviews are imperative to develop culturally safe healthcare practices and institutions. 
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加拿大原住民文化安全医疗保健倡议、实施和建议:系统回顾
加拿大各地土著人民的健康继续受到寻求医疗保健时种族主义经历的严重影响。加拿大真相与和解委员会确定,实施文化安全是减轻这些负面健康后果的关键途径。本系统综述旨在概述文化安全及其在学术界的相关衍生品,文化安全是什么,以及为什么它在土著医疗保健的背景下很重要。对PubMed进行了系统搜索,将2015年12月之后发表的加拿大上下文的搜索进行了优化,并且仅限于同行评议的评论和系统评论。对文章的专题审查确定了关于论文中提供的信息的四个重要中心思想;文化安全和相关衍生品的定义,将文化纳入医疗保健的重要性,对医疗保健机构的建议,以及文化安全举措的评估方法。显然,有必要对文化安全作出明确和一致的定义,并将土著人民纳入这一定义的制定之中。为了确定有效性、差距和需要改进的领域,必须采用包括独特的土著世界观在内的评估方法,以发展文化上安全的保健做法和机构。
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