Traditional healing and medicine in dementia care for Indigenous populations in North America, Australia, and New Zealand: Exploring culturally-safe dementia care policy from a global perspective.

IF 4 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Alzheimer''s and Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment and Disease Monitoring Pub Date : 2024-10-16 eCollection Date: 2024-10-01 DOI:10.1002/dad2.12620
Hom Lal Shrestha, Lucy Shrestha, Michael McArthur, Robyn K Rowe, Marion Maar, Jennifer D Walker
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Abstract

Introduction: In 2018, the World Health Organization recognized traditional healers as community stakeholders in dementia care. This scoping review aimed to summarize the existing dementia care literature regarding strategies for the integration of traditional healing in dementia care and the roles of traditional healers.

Methods: A group of Indigenous Elders from Northern Ontario, Canada, guided, reviewed, and validated the research process and findings. The Joanna Briggs Institute approach was applied to a structured search strategy across the CINAHL, Embase, MEDLINE, and PsycINFO databases. A title and abstract screening were completed, followed by a full-text assessment of the identified manuscripts.

Results: A total of 143 full manuscripts were reviewed, of which two studies fully met the community-determined inclusion/exclusion criteria.

Discussion: The integration of traditional healing practices into dementia care offers a pathway to culturally-safe care for people with dementia. The findings identified policy advocacy as key to engage, educate, and empower traditional healers.

Highlights: The WHO recognized traditional healers as community stakeholders in dementia care and prevention worldwide in 2018; however, traditional healers are underrepresented and marginalized in healthcare systems due to the lack of culturally-safe dementia care (CSDC) policies at community and national levels globally.Community-based CSDC models were critically reviewed and validated by local Indigenous community stakeholder consultations.The result is a call to action to assist the WHO and Alzheimer's Disease International in developing guidelines for CSDC policy improvements with the global Indigenous community for the engagement and empowerment of traditional healers to navigate dementia care and to implement the WHO Global Action Plan on the Public Health Response to Dementia (2017-2025).Integration of Western biomedical and Indigenous traditional healing and medicine in dementia care in the healthcare system can reduce health disparities and empower traditional healers on a global scale. Indigenous-led models that include traditional healers in dementia care are critical for improving equity gaps in dementia care for Indigenous Peoples.

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北美、澳大利亚和新西兰土著居民痴呆症护理中的传统治疗和医学:从全球视角探索文化安全的痴呆症护理政策。
简介2018 年,世界卫生组织承认传统治疗师是痴呆症护理的社区利益相关者。本范围综述旨在总结现有痴呆症护理文献中有关将传统疗法融入痴呆症护理的策略以及传统治疗师的作用的内容:一组来自加拿大安大略省北部的原住民长老对研究过程和结果进行了指导、审查和验证。乔安娜-布里格斯研究所(Joanna Briggs Institute)的方法被应用于 CINAHL、Embase、MEDLINE 和 PsycINFO 数据库的结构化搜索策略。完成了标题和摘要筛选,随后对确定的手稿进行了全文评估:结果:共审查了 143 篇完整稿件,其中两篇研究完全符合社区确定的纳入/排除标准:讨论:将传统治疗方法融入痴呆症护理为痴呆症患者提供了一条文化上安全的护理途径。研究结果表明,政策宣传是吸引、教育传统治疗师并增强其能力的关键:2018年,世卫组织承认传统治疗师是全球痴呆症护理和预防的社区利益相关者;然而,由于全球社区和国家层面缺乏文化安全痴呆症护理(CSDC)政策,传统治疗师在医疗保健系统中的代表性不足并被边缘化。其结果是呼吁采取行动,协助世卫组织和国际阿尔茨海默氏症协会与全球原住民社区共同制定 CSDC 政策改进指南,以便让传统治疗师参与痴呆症护理并增强其能力,并实施《世卫组织痴呆症公共卫生应对全球行动计划(2017-2025 年)》。将西方生物医学与原住民传统治疗和医学结合到医疗保健系统的痴呆症护理中,可在全球范围内减少健康差距并增强传统治疗师的能力。由原住民主导、将传统治疗师纳入痴呆症护理的模式对于改善原住民痴呆症护理的公平差距至关重要。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
7.50%
发文量
101
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Alzheimer''s & Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment & Disease Monitoring (DADM) is an open access, peer-reviewed, journal from the Alzheimer''s Association® that will publish new research that reports the discovery, development and validation of instruments, technologies, algorithms, and innovative processes. Papers will cover a range of topics interested in the early and accurate detection of individuals with memory complaints and/or among asymptomatic individuals at elevated risk for various forms of memory disorders. The expectation for published papers will be to translate fundamental knowledge about the neurobiology of the disease into practical reports that describe both the conceptual and methodological aspects of the submitted scientific inquiry. Published topics will explore the development of biomarkers, surrogate markers, and conceptual/methodological challenges. Publication priority will be given to papers that 1) describe putative surrogate markers that accurately track disease progression, 2) biomarkers that fulfill international regulatory requirements, 3) reports from large, well-characterized population-based cohorts that comprise the heterogeneity and diversity of asymptomatic individuals and 4) algorithmic development that considers multi-marker arrays (e.g., integrated-omics, genetics, biofluids, imaging, etc.) and advanced computational analytics and technologies.
期刊最新文献
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