Person Centred Palliative Care: A First Nations Perspective

Introduction: Palliative care in Canada is an under-funded service for all Canadians, but for Aboriginal people in Canada, the level of access to such care is significantly lower. This study examined the system of palliative care delivery at Six Nations of the Grand River. The overall aim of the pro...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: O`Brien, Valerie A.
Other Authors: Brazil, Kevin, MacMillan, Harriet, Lohfeld, Lynne, Health Research Methodology
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12633
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spelling ftmcmaster:oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/12633 2023-05-15T16:16:03+02:00 Person Centred Palliative Care: A First Nations Perspective O`Brien, Valerie A. Brazil, Kevin MacMillan, Harriet Lohfeld, Lynne Health Research Methodology 2012-09-26 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12633 unknown opendissertations/7501 8561 3351427 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12633 Aboriginal First Nations Palliative Care End-of-Life Health Policy Other Medicine and Health Sciences thesis 2012 ftmcmaster 2022-03-22T21:11:34Z Introduction: Palliative care in Canada is an under-funded service for all Canadians, but for Aboriginal people in Canada, the level of access to such care is significantly lower. This study examined the system of palliative care delivery at Six Nations of the Grand River. The overall aim of the project was to identify ways on how the system of care could be improved. Methods: A qualitative case study approach was used. Interviews were held with Elders and family caregivers to identify the priorities in care delivery from their perspective. Focus groups were held with representatives from palliative care service provider agencies in an effort to identify the strengths and challenges within the system and to determine how palliative care services provided to the members of Six Nations could be improved. Findings: Themes identified in the interviews included: personable, caring care; culturally-competent care; open two-way communication; support for family caregivers; palliative home care should be available; meeting comfort needs of the person; and the need for a hospice in the community. The main theme identified in the focus groups with care providers included: relationship/rapport issues between provider organizations; within-program strengths and challenges; cultural considerations in care; and broader system factors that influence care. Discussion: Relationship/rapport issues were identified as a challenge, and it appeared that the focus groups provided an opportunity for communication between the organizations to improve. Identification of within-program challenges – and ways to address these challenges - may provide opportunities for each organization to improve how palliative care services are delivered at Six Nations. Identification of broader system factors that influence care may also benefit patients in need of palliative care. Master of Science (MSc) Thesis First Nations MacSphere (McMaster University) Canada
institution Open Polar
collection MacSphere (McMaster University)
op_collection_id ftmcmaster
language unknown
topic Aboriginal
First Nations
Palliative Care
End-of-Life
Health Policy
Other Medicine and Health Sciences
spellingShingle Aboriginal
First Nations
Palliative Care
End-of-Life
Health Policy
Other Medicine and Health Sciences
O`Brien, Valerie A.
Person Centred Palliative Care: A First Nations Perspective
topic_facet Aboriginal
First Nations
Palliative Care
End-of-Life
Health Policy
Other Medicine and Health Sciences
description Introduction: Palliative care in Canada is an under-funded service for all Canadians, but for Aboriginal people in Canada, the level of access to such care is significantly lower. This study examined the system of palliative care delivery at Six Nations of the Grand River. The overall aim of the project was to identify ways on how the system of care could be improved. Methods: A qualitative case study approach was used. Interviews were held with Elders and family caregivers to identify the priorities in care delivery from their perspective. Focus groups were held with representatives from palliative care service provider agencies in an effort to identify the strengths and challenges within the system and to determine how palliative care services provided to the members of Six Nations could be improved. Findings: Themes identified in the interviews included: personable, caring care; culturally-competent care; open two-way communication; support for family caregivers; palliative home care should be available; meeting comfort needs of the person; and the need for a hospice in the community. The main theme identified in the focus groups with care providers included: relationship/rapport issues between provider organizations; within-program strengths and challenges; cultural considerations in care; and broader system factors that influence care. Discussion: Relationship/rapport issues were identified as a challenge, and it appeared that the focus groups provided an opportunity for communication between the organizations to improve. Identification of within-program challenges – and ways to address these challenges - may provide opportunities for each organization to improve how palliative care services are delivered at Six Nations. Identification of broader system factors that influence care may also benefit patients in need of palliative care. Master of Science (MSc)
author2 Brazil, Kevin
MacMillan, Harriet
Lohfeld, Lynne
Health Research Methodology
format Thesis
author O`Brien, Valerie A.
author_facet O`Brien, Valerie A.
author_sort O`Brien, Valerie A.
title Person Centred Palliative Care: A First Nations Perspective
title_short Person Centred Palliative Care: A First Nations Perspective
title_full Person Centred Palliative Care: A First Nations Perspective
title_fullStr Person Centred Palliative Care: A First Nations Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Person Centred Palliative Care: A First Nations Perspective
title_sort person centred palliative care: a first nations perspective
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12633
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation opendissertations/7501
8561
3351427
http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12633
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