Experiences of physical healthcare services in Māori and non-Māori with mental health and substance use conditions.

IF 4 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2024-03-20 DOI:10.1177/00048674241238958
Ruth Cunningham, Fiona Imlach, Tracy Haitana, Mau Te Rangimarie Clark, Susanna Every-Palmer, Helen Lockett, Debbie Peterson
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Abstract

Objectives: Inequities in physical health outcomes exist for people with mental health and substance use conditions and for Indigenous populations (Māori in Aotearoa New Zealand). These inequities may be partly explained by poorer quality of physical healthcare services, including discrimination at systemic and individual levels. This study investigated the experiences of people with mental health and substance use conditions accessing physical healthcare and differences in service quality for non-Māori relative to Māori.

Methods: A cross-sectional online survey of people with mental health and substance use conditions in New Zealand asked about four aspects of service quality in four healthcare settings: general practice, emergency department, hospital and pharmacy. The quality domains were: treated with respect; listened to; treated unfairly due to mental health and substance use conditions; mental health and substance use condition diagnoses distracting clinicians from physical healthcare (diagnostic and treatment overshadowing).

Results: Across the four health services, pharmacy was rated highest for all quality measures and emergency department lowest. Participants rated general practice services highly for being treated with respect and listened to but reported relatively high levels of overshadowing in general practice, emergency department and hospital services. Experiences of unfair treatment were more common in emergency department and hospital than general practice and pharmacy. Compared to Māori, non-Māori reported higher levels of being treated with respect and listened to in most services and were more likely to report 'never' experiencing unfair treatment and overshadowing for all health services.

Conclusion: Interventions to address discrimination and poor-quality health services to people with mental health and substance use conditions should be tailored to the physical healthcare setting. More needs to be done to address institutional racism in systems that privilege non-Māori.

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毛利人和非毛利人在精神健康和药物使用方面的身体保健服务体验。
目标:患有精神疾病和使用药物的人以及土著居民(新西兰奥特亚罗瓦的毛利人)在身体健康方面存在不平等。造成这些不平等现象的部分原因可能是较差的身体保健服务质量,包括系统和个人层面的歧视。本研究调查了心理健康和药物使用患者获得医疗保健服务的经历,以及非毛利人与毛利人在服务质量上的差异:方法:对新西兰的精神疾病患者和药物滥用患者进行了一项横断面在线调查,询问了他们在普通诊所、急诊科、医院和药房等四种医疗机构的服务质量的四个方面。质量领域包括:受到尊重;被倾听;因精神健康和药物使用状况而受到不公平对待;精神健康和药物使用状况诊断分散了临床医生对身体保健的注意力(诊断和治疗遮蔽):在四项医疗服务中,药房在所有质量衡量标准中的评分最高,急诊科的评分最低。参与者对全科医疗服务的尊重和倾听程度评价较高,但对全科医疗服务、急诊科和医院服务的遮蔽程度评价相对较高。与全科医生和药房相比,急诊科和医院受到不公平待遇的情况更为普遍。与毛利人相比,非毛利人在大多数服务中受到尊重和倾听的程度较高,在所有医疗服务中更有可能表示 "从未 "受到不公平待遇和遮遮掩掩:结论:针对心理健康和药物滥用患者的歧视和劣质医疗服务的干预措施应适合于实际医疗环境。还需要做更多的工作,来解决那些使非毛利人享有特权的制度性种族主义问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.00
自引率
2.20%
发文量
149
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry is the official Journal of The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists (RANZCP). The Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry is a monthly journal publishing original articles which describe research or report opinions of interest to psychiatrists. These contributions may be presented as original research, reviews, perspectives, commentaries and letters to the editor. The Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry is the leading psychiatry journal of the Asia-Pacific region.
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