Tū Tahanga: A Qualitative Descriptive Study of a Culturally Adapted Violence Prevention Programme in a Forensic Mental Health Service

IF 1.3 4区 医学 Q3 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY International Journal of Forensic Mental Health Pub Date : 2021-07-15 DOI:10.1080/14999013.2021.1953194
Francis Florencio, D. Healee, Te Ratahi, N. Wiki, B. McKenna
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Abstract There is growing evidence that culturally adapted, evidence-based, violence prevention programmes can have benefits for people in correctional and forensic mental health services. Adding to this evidence is crucial, given the over-representation of Indigenous people and ethnic minorities in such services. This qualitative descriptive study describes Tū Tahanga, which combines the ManAlive violence prevention programme, with Māori (Indigenous people of Aotearoa/New Zealand) cultural concepts. This was developed for Māori service users in a forensic mental health service. Content analysis was undertaken through interviews with participants in the group (N = 11). Core aspects of ManAlive were maintained. These aspects coexist with cultural concepts of a specific healing space, a holistic Māori model of health, and the creation of family like supportive relationships reinforced by living in the same facility. This description lays a platform for future evaluative research to determine the impact of the programme on reducing violent offending.
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TúTahanga:法医心理健康服务中适应文化的暴力预防计划的定性描述性研究
摘要越来越多的证据表明,适应文化、循证的暴力预防方案可以为惩教和法医心理健康服务人员带来好处。鉴于土著人民和少数民族在此类服务中的代表性过高,补充这一证据至关重要。这项定性描述性研究描述了TúTahanga,它将ManAlive暴力预防方案与毛利人(新西兰奥特亚土著人)的文化概念相结合。这是为法医心理健康服务中的毛利人服务用户开发的。内容分析是通过对小组参与者的访谈进行的(N = 11) 。ManAlive的核心方面得以保留。这些方面与特定的治疗空间、整体的毛利人健康模式以及通过生活在同一设施中加强的家庭式支持关系的文化概念共存。这一描述为未来的评估研究奠定了平台,以确定该方案对减少暴力犯罪的影响。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
7.10%
发文量
24
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