Literature DB >> 19951240

Diet, diabetes and relatedness in a central Australian Aboriginal settlement: some qualitative recommendations to facilitate the creation of culturally sensitive health promotion initiatives.

Françoise Dussart1.   

Abstract

ISSUE ADDRESSED: At the request of chronically-ill Aboriginal patients in Central Australia with whom I have worked for the past 25 years, ethnographic research was conducted to provide a better understanding of how diabetes sufferers cope with their illness in everyday life for the creation of more culturally sensitive health promotion initiatives.
METHODS: Based on analyses of participant-observation data and semi-structured interviews over an eight month period with 84 Aboriginal diabetic sufferers and their kin, as well as conversations with medical staff working at the local clinic, this paper discusses contemporary Aboriginal contemporary dietary practices, postcolonial demand-sharing economy, deployment of various regimes of care and health promotion initiatives.
RESULTS: Diabetic patients lack access to what is determined key by health care providers to offset ill-health such as diabetic-friendly food. In order to cope and make sense of their chronic illness, diabetic patients oscillate between different regimes of care - biomedical, demand-sharing economy, and traditional and Christian religious institutions.
CONCLUSION: To ensure a certain measure of success, long-term health promotion initiatives need to be grounded in a Warlpiri caring praxis of 'looking after', and rely on realistic collaborations among patients and their kin, local health care providers, and other community-based organisations.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19951240     DOI: 10.1071/he09202

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Promot J Austr        ISSN: 1036-1073


  4 in total

Review 1.  How diet modification challenges are magnified in vulnerable or marginalized people with diabetes and heart disease: a systematic review and qualitative meta-synthesis.

Authors:  M Vanstone; M Giacomini; A Smith; F Brundisini; D DeJean; S Winsor
Journal:  Ont Health Technol Assess Ser       Date:  2013-09-01

2.  Built Environment Features and Cardiometabolic Mortality and Morbidity in Remote Indigenous Communities in the Northern Territory, Australia.

Authors:  Amal Chakraborty; Margaret Cargo; Victor Maduabuchi Oguoma; Neil T Coffee; Alwin Chong; Mark Daniel
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2022-08-01       Impact factor: 4.614

3.  'I call it the blame and shame disease': a qualitative study about perceptions of social stigma surrounding type 2 diabetes.

Authors:  Jessica L Browne; Adriana Ventura; Kylie Mosely; Jane Speight
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2013-11-18       Impact factor: 2.692

Review 4.  Heart Failure in Minority Populations - Impediments to Optimal Treatment in Australian Aborigines.

Authors:  Pupalan Iyngkaran; Nadarajan Kangaharan; Hendrik Zimmet; Margaret Arstall; Rob Minson; Merlin C Thomas; Peter Bergin; John Atherton; Peter MacDonald; David L Hare; John D Horowitz; Marcus Ilton
Journal:  Curr Cardiol Rev       Date:  2016
  4 in total

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