Health Journey Mapping to Identify Strength and Resilience as experienced by an Aboriginal Woman with Kidney Disease

This item is only available electronically. The narrative told about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health often focuses on ill health, with large gaps in measured health outcomes between First Nations and non-Indigenous Australians. For chronic kidney disease, it is estimated that t...

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Main Author: Cormick, Alyssa
Other Authors: School of Psychology
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2440/133191
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spelling ftunivadelaidedl:oai:digital.library.adelaide.edu.au:2440/133191 2023-05-15T16:15:01+02:00 Health Journey Mapping to Identify Strength and Resilience as experienced by an Aboriginal Woman with Kidney Disease Cormick, Alyssa School of Psychology 2021 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/2440/133191 unknown https://hdl.handle.net/2440/133191 Honours Psychology Thesis 2021 ftunivadelaidedl 2023-02-05T19:37:29Z This item is only available electronically. The narrative told about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health often focuses on ill health, with large gaps in measured health outcomes between First Nations and non-Indigenous Australians. For chronic kidney disease, it is estimated that the burden of disease for First Nations peoples is seven times greater that of non-Indigenous Australians. However, First Nations definitions of health are not purely biomedical focusing on illness and disease. They are instead inclusive of all aspects of an individual’s lived experience, including their connection to body, mind, spirit, community, family, culture, and land. Using a Western scientific lens to examine the health of First Nations peoples further colonises their experiences and fails to portray their lived reality. Research can employ a narrow approach when identifying the lived experiences of First Nations, however decolonised research methods offer new approaches to hearing their untold stories. This project was conducted collaboratively with a female member of the Aboriginal Kidney care together: improving outcomes now (AKction) Reference Group, to map and identify how she thrived in her journey despite having kidney disease. Research yarning, a culturally appropriate research method, and thematic analysis were conducted with her collaboration to answer how she demonstrated strength and resilience throughout her journey. Findings highlighted that her kidney health journey was complex, with kidney health forming only one aspect of her journey. The participant demonstrated resilience while facing complex challenges, using her connections, actions, and mindset to thrive and not just survive her journey. Thesis (B.PsychSc(Hons)) -- University of Adelaide, School of Psychology, 2021 Thesis First Nations The University of Adelaide: Digital Library
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Adelaide: Digital Library
op_collection_id ftunivadelaidedl
language unknown
topic Honours
Psychology
spellingShingle Honours
Psychology
Cormick, Alyssa
Health Journey Mapping to Identify Strength and Resilience as experienced by an Aboriginal Woman with Kidney Disease
topic_facet Honours
Psychology
description This item is only available electronically. The narrative told about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health often focuses on ill health, with large gaps in measured health outcomes between First Nations and non-Indigenous Australians. For chronic kidney disease, it is estimated that the burden of disease for First Nations peoples is seven times greater that of non-Indigenous Australians. However, First Nations definitions of health are not purely biomedical focusing on illness and disease. They are instead inclusive of all aspects of an individual’s lived experience, including their connection to body, mind, spirit, community, family, culture, and land. Using a Western scientific lens to examine the health of First Nations peoples further colonises their experiences and fails to portray their lived reality. Research can employ a narrow approach when identifying the lived experiences of First Nations, however decolonised research methods offer new approaches to hearing their untold stories. This project was conducted collaboratively with a female member of the Aboriginal Kidney care together: improving outcomes now (AKction) Reference Group, to map and identify how she thrived in her journey despite having kidney disease. Research yarning, a culturally appropriate research method, and thematic analysis were conducted with her collaboration to answer how she demonstrated strength and resilience throughout her journey. Findings highlighted that her kidney health journey was complex, with kidney health forming only one aspect of her journey. The participant demonstrated resilience while facing complex challenges, using her connections, actions, and mindset to thrive and not just survive her journey. Thesis (B.PsychSc(Hons)) -- University of Adelaide, School of Psychology, 2021
author2 School of Psychology
format Thesis
author Cormick, Alyssa
author_facet Cormick, Alyssa
author_sort Cormick, Alyssa
title Health Journey Mapping to Identify Strength and Resilience as experienced by an Aboriginal Woman with Kidney Disease
title_short Health Journey Mapping to Identify Strength and Resilience as experienced by an Aboriginal Woman with Kidney Disease
title_full Health Journey Mapping to Identify Strength and Resilience as experienced by an Aboriginal Woman with Kidney Disease
title_fullStr Health Journey Mapping to Identify Strength and Resilience as experienced by an Aboriginal Woman with Kidney Disease
title_full_unstemmed Health Journey Mapping to Identify Strength and Resilience as experienced by an Aboriginal Woman with Kidney Disease
title_sort health journey mapping to identify strength and resilience as experienced by an aboriginal woman with kidney disease
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/2440/133191
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/2440/133191
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