Author:
Omar Samira,Williams Charmaine C.,Bugg Laura B.,Colantonio Angela
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Over two decades of research about traumatic brain injury (TBI) rehabilitation emphasized the persistence of racial health disparities in functional outcomes that disproportionately impact Black populations without naming or addressing racism as the root problem. Further, the experiences of Black people with TBI have yet to be documented and accounted for in scientific scholarship from the perspectives of Black persons in Canada.
Purpose
This study intended to examine the rehabilitation narratives of Black TBI survivors, family caregivers, and rehabilitation providers and use critical race theory as a conceptual framework to understand how anti-Black racism manifests in those experiences.
Methods
Through critical narrative inquiry informed by a critical constructivist paradigm and a critical race theory lens, in-depth narrative interviewing were conducted with seven survivors, three family caregivers, and four rehabilitation providers. Data were analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis within and across groups of participants to conceptualize themes and sub-themes.
Findings
Themes captured how racism becomes institutionalized in TBI rehabilitation: (1) the institutional construction of deficient Black bodies, (2) the institutional construction of rehabilitation access, (3) the institutional investment in resisting and approximating whiteness in rehabilitation practice, and (4) the institutional construction of deficient Black futures.
Conclusion
Study findings point to the dire need to ensure rehabilitation programs, services, and the delivery of care are not determined based on inequitable practices, racial biases and assumptions about Black people, which determine who deserves to get into rehabilitation and have opportunities to be supported in working towards living a full and meaningful life.
Funder
Ontario Graduate Student Scholarship
Toronto Rehabilitation Institute Student Scholarship
Doctoral Completion Award
Theresa and Miron Polatajko Graduate Award
Bernard Lau Memorial Scholarship
Judy Willcocks Memorial Bursary
Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada
Fondation Brain Canada
Institute of Circulatory and Respiratory Health
Canada Research Chairs Program in Traumatic Brain Injury in Underserved Populations
Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献