土著社区的心理健康实施研究:创造文化上安全的空间以增强集体力量

Nicole A D’souza, Michaela Field, Tristan Supino, Mia Messer, Erin Aleck, Laurence J Kirmayer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在本文中,我们将结合土著社区实施研究的伦理、政治和实践,讨论文化安全的概念。我们召开了为期三天的研讨会,来自加拿大原住民社区和大学的 23 位原住民和非原住民合作者聚集一堂,共同思考在原住民社区实施原住民青少年和家庭心理健康促进计划的经验。与会者确定了在实施研究中实现文化安全空间的三个核心方面:(1) 土著和非土著合作伙伴之间合作的人际动态;(2) 合作工作所需的结构和时间安排;(3) 对土著文化知识、价值观和习俗的系统认可和融入。在实施研究中,关注文化安全可以减轻因研究框架和方法排斥土著观点和价值观而产生的认识论上的不公正。文化安全可以提高研究过程本身促进心理健康的可能性。
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Mental health implementation research in Indigenous communities: creating culturally safe space to enhance collective strengths
In this article, we discuss the construct of cultural safety in relation to the ethics, politics, and practice of implementation research in Indigenous communities. We convened a 3-day workshop, bringing together 23 Indigenous and non-Indigenous collaborators from First Nation communities and universities across Canada to reflect on experiences with implementing an Indigenous youth and family mental health promotion program in First Nation communities. Participants identified three dimensions central to achieving culturally safe space in implementation research: (1) interpersonal dynamics of collaboration between Indigenous and non-Indigenous partners; (2) structural and temporal arrangements necessary for collaborative work; and (3) the systematic recognition and incorporation of Indigenous cultural knowledge, values, and practices. Within implementation research, attention to cultural safety can mitigate the epistemic injustice that arise from research frameworks and methodologies that exclude Indigenous perspectives and values. Cultural safety can increase the likelihood that the research process itself contributes to mental health promotion.
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CiteScore
2.40
自引率
10.50%
发文量
72
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