Visibility and Voice

Author:

Hole Rachelle D.1,Evans Mike1,Berg Lawrence D.1,Bottorff Joan L.1,Dingwall Carlene1,Alexis Carmella1,Nyberg Jessie1,Smith Michelle L.1

Affiliation:

1. The University of British Columbia, Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada

Abstract

In Canada, cultural safety (CS) is emerging as a theoretical and practice lens to orient health care services to meet the needs of Aboriginal people. Evidence suggests Aboriginal peoples’ encounters with health care are commonly negative, and there is concern that these experiences can contribute to further adverse health outcomes. In this article, we report findings based on participatory action research drawing on Indigenous methods. Our project goal was to interrogate practices within one hospital to see whether and how CS for Aboriginal patients could be improved. Interviews with Aboriginal patients who had accessed hospital services were conducted, and responses were collated into narrative summaries. Using interlocking analysis, findings revealed a number of processes operating to produce adverse health outcomes. One significant outcome is the production of structural violence that reproduces experiences of institutional trauma. Positive culturally safe experiences, although less frequently reported, were described as interpersonal interactions with feelings visibility and therefore, treatment as a “human being.”

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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