Cultural safety involves new professional roles: A rapid review of interventions in Australia, the United States, Canada and New Zealand

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Tremblay, M. C., Olivier-D’Avignon, G., Garceau, L., Échaquan, S., Fletcher, C., Leclerc, A. M., Poitras, M. E., Neashish, E., Maillet, L. et Paquette, J. S. (2023). Cultural safety involves new professional roles: A rapid review of interventions in Australia, the United States, Canada and New Zealand. AlterNative, 19 (1). pp. 166-175. ISSN 1177-1801 1174-1740 DOI 10.1177/11771801221146787

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Résumé

Abstract

Cultural safety is a decolonizing and transformative approach to health care aimed at achieving health care that recognizes, respects and nurtures the needs, rights and identities of Indigenous peoples. Such a transformation requires new or radically reimagined professional roles. Based on a rapid review design, this synthesis aimed to identify fundamental characteristics of cultural safety interventions that involved the creation or transformation of professional roles. The 23 included studies presented three main categories of professional roles for cultural safety. These roles were focused on (a) supporting health care system navigation, (b) providing a new or improved service offering, and (c) building organizational capacity to provide culturally safe health care. Our results demonstrate that cultural safety can be implemented by key actors playing different roles at different levels of the health care organization. These roles should be viewed as complementary to one another and be defined and implemented in partnership with Indigenous partners. © The Author(s) 2023.

Type de document: Article
Mots-clés libres: Aboriginals Cultural competent care Cultural safety Health care Health safety
Date de dépôt: 10 mai 2024 15:05
Dernière modification: 10 mai 2024 15:05
Version du document déposé: Version officielle de l'éditeur
URI: https://depot-e.uqtr.ca/id/eprint/11280

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