Cargando…

“The most culturally safe training I’ve ever had”: the co-design of a culturally safe Managing hepatitis B training course with and for the Aboriginal health workforce of the Northern Territory of Australia

BACKGROUND: The Aboriginal health workforce provide responsive, culturally safe health care. We aimed to co-design a culturally safe course with and for the Aboriginal health workforce. We describe the factors which led to the successful co-design, delivery, and evaluation of the “Managing hepatitis...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hosking, Kelly, De Santis, Teresa, Vintour-Cesar, Emily, Wilson, Phillip Merrdi, Bunn, Linda, Gurruwiwi, George Garambaka, Wurrawilya, Shiraline, Bukulatjpi, Sarah Mariyalawuy, Nelson, Sandra, Ross, Cheryl, Binks, Paula, Schroder, Phoebe, Davis, Joshua S., Taylor, Sean, Connors, Christine, Davies, Jane
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10472722/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37653370
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-023-09902-w
_version_ 1785100142498545664
author Hosking, Kelly
De Santis, Teresa
Vintour-Cesar, Emily
Wilson, Phillip Merrdi
Bunn, Linda
Gurruwiwi, George Garambaka
Wurrawilya, Shiraline
Bukulatjpi, Sarah Mariyalawuy
Nelson, Sandra
Ross, Cheryl
Binks, Paula
Schroder, Phoebe
Davis, Joshua S.
Taylor, Sean
Connors, Christine
Davies, Jane
author_facet Hosking, Kelly
De Santis, Teresa
Vintour-Cesar, Emily
Wilson, Phillip Merrdi
Bunn, Linda
Gurruwiwi, George Garambaka
Wurrawilya, Shiraline
Bukulatjpi, Sarah Mariyalawuy
Nelson, Sandra
Ross, Cheryl
Binks, Paula
Schroder, Phoebe
Davis, Joshua S.
Taylor, Sean
Connors, Christine
Davies, Jane
author_sort Hosking, Kelly
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The Aboriginal health workforce provide responsive, culturally safe health care. We aimed to co-design a culturally safe course with and for the Aboriginal health workforce. We describe the factors which led to the successful co-design, delivery, and evaluation of the “Managing hepatitis B” course for the Aboriginal health workforce. METHODS: A Participatory Action Research approach was used, involving ongoing consultation to iteratively co-design and then develop course content, materials, and evaluation tools. An Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander research and teaching team received education in chronic hepatitis B and teaching methodologies. Pilot courses were held, in remote communities of the Northern Territory, using two-way learning and teach-back methods to further develop the course and assess acceptability and learnings. Data collection involved focus group discussions, in-class observations, reflective analysis, and use of co-designed and assessed evaluation tools. RESULTS: Twenty-six participants attended the pilot courses. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander facilitators delivered a high proportion of the course. Evaluations demonstrated high course acceptability, cultural safety, and learnings. Key elements contributing to success and acceptability were acknowledging, respecting, and integrating cultural differences into education, delivering messaging and key concepts through an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander lens, using culturally appropriate approaches to learning including storytelling and visual teaching methodologies. Evaluation of culturally safe frameworks and findings from the co-design process led to the creation of a conceptual framework, underpinned by meeting people’s basic needs, and offering a safe and comfortable environment to enable productive learning with attention to the following: sustenance, financial security, cultural obligations, and gender and kinship relationships. CONCLUSIONS: Co-designed education for the Aboriginal health workforce must embed principles of cultural safety and meaningful community consultation to enable an increase in knowledge and empowerment. The findings of this research can be used to guide the design of future health education for First Nations health professionals and to other non-dominant cultures. The course model has been successfully transferred to other health issues in the Northern Territory. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12913-023-09902-w.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10472722
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-104727222023-09-02 “The most culturally safe training I’ve ever had”: the co-design of a culturally safe Managing hepatitis B training course with and for the Aboriginal health workforce of the Northern Territory of Australia Hosking, Kelly De Santis, Teresa Vintour-Cesar, Emily Wilson, Phillip Merrdi Bunn, Linda Gurruwiwi, George Garambaka Wurrawilya, Shiraline Bukulatjpi, Sarah Mariyalawuy Nelson, Sandra Ross, Cheryl Binks, Paula Schroder, Phoebe Davis, Joshua S. Taylor, Sean Connors, Christine Davies, Jane BMC Health Serv Res Research BACKGROUND: The Aboriginal health workforce provide responsive, culturally safe health care. We aimed to co-design a culturally safe course with and for the Aboriginal health workforce. We describe the factors which led to the successful co-design, delivery, and evaluation of the “Managing hepatitis B” course for the Aboriginal health workforce. METHODS: A Participatory Action Research approach was used, involving ongoing consultation to iteratively co-design and then develop course content, materials, and evaluation tools. An Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander research and teaching team received education in chronic hepatitis B and teaching methodologies. Pilot courses were held, in remote communities of the Northern Territory, using two-way learning and teach-back methods to further develop the course and assess acceptability and learnings. Data collection involved focus group discussions, in-class observations, reflective analysis, and use of co-designed and assessed evaluation tools. RESULTS: Twenty-six participants attended the pilot courses. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander facilitators delivered a high proportion of the course. Evaluations demonstrated high course acceptability, cultural safety, and learnings. Key elements contributing to success and acceptability were acknowledging, respecting, and integrating cultural differences into education, delivering messaging and key concepts through an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander lens, using culturally appropriate approaches to learning including storytelling and visual teaching methodologies. Evaluation of culturally safe frameworks and findings from the co-design process led to the creation of a conceptual framework, underpinned by meeting people’s basic needs, and offering a safe and comfortable environment to enable productive learning with attention to the following: sustenance, financial security, cultural obligations, and gender and kinship relationships. CONCLUSIONS: Co-designed education for the Aboriginal health workforce must embed principles of cultural safety and meaningful community consultation to enable an increase in knowledge and empowerment. The findings of this research can be used to guide the design of future health education for First Nations health professionals and to other non-dominant cultures. The course model has been successfully transferred to other health issues in the Northern Territory. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12913-023-09902-w. BioMed Central 2023-08-31 /pmc/articles/PMC10472722/ /pubmed/37653370 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-023-09902-w Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) . The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) ) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated in a credit line to the data.
spellingShingle Research
Hosking, Kelly
De Santis, Teresa
Vintour-Cesar, Emily
Wilson, Phillip Merrdi
Bunn, Linda
Gurruwiwi, George Garambaka
Wurrawilya, Shiraline
Bukulatjpi, Sarah Mariyalawuy
Nelson, Sandra
Ross, Cheryl
Binks, Paula
Schroder, Phoebe
Davis, Joshua S.
Taylor, Sean
Connors, Christine
Davies, Jane
“The most culturally safe training I’ve ever had”: the co-design of a culturally safe Managing hepatitis B training course with and for the Aboriginal health workforce of the Northern Territory of Australia
title “The most culturally safe training I’ve ever had”: the co-design of a culturally safe Managing hepatitis B training course with and for the Aboriginal health workforce of the Northern Territory of Australia
title_full “The most culturally safe training I’ve ever had”: the co-design of a culturally safe Managing hepatitis B training course with and for the Aboriginal health workforce of the Northern Territory of Australia
title_fullStr “The most culturally safe training I’ve ever had”: the co-design of a culturally safe Managing hepatitis B training course with and for the Aboriginal health workforce of the Northern Territory of Australia
title_full_unstemmed “The most culturally safe training I’ve ever had”: the co-design of a culturally safe Managing hepatitis B training course with and for the Aboriginal health workforce of the Northern Territory of Australia
title_short “The most culturally safe training I’ve ever had”: the co-design of a culturally safe Managing hepatitis B training course with and for the Aboriginal health workforce of the Northern Territory of Australia
title_sort “the most culturally safe training i’ve ever had”: the co-design of a culturally safe managing hepatitis b training course with and for the aboriginal health workforce of the northern territory of australia
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10472722/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37653370
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-023-09902-w
work_keys_str_mv AT hoskingkelly themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT desantisteresa themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT vintourcesaremily themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT wilsonphillipmerrdi themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT bunnlinda themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT gurruwiwigeorgegarambaka themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT wurrawilyashiraline themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT bukulatjpisarahmariyalawuy themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT nelsonsandra themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT rosscheryl themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT binkspaula themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT schroderphoebe themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT davisjoshuas themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT taylorsean themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT connorschristine themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT daviesjane themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia
AT themostculturallysafetrainingiveeverhadthecodesignofaculturallysafemanaginghepatitisbtrainingcoursewithandfortheaboriginalhealthworkforceofthenorthernterritoryofaustralia