| Literature DB >> 34071636 |
Alana Gall1, Kate Anderson1, Kirsten Howard2, Abbey Diaz1, Alexandra King3, Esther Willing4, Michele Connolly5, Daniel Lindsay1, Gail Garvey1.
Abstract
Despite the health improvements afforded to non-Indigenous peoples in Canada, Aotearoa (New Zealand) and the United States, the Indigenous peoples in these countries continue to endure disproportionately high rates of mortality and morbidity. Indigenous peoples' concepts and understanding of health and wellbeing are holistic; however, due to their diverse social, political, cultural, environmental and economic contexts within and across countries, wellbeing is not experienced uniformly across all Indigenous populations. We aim to identify aspects of wellbeing important to the Indigenous people in Canada, Aotearoa and the United States. We searched CINAHL, Embase, PsycINFO and PubMed databases for papers that included key Indigenous and wellbeing search terms from database inception to April 2020. Papers that included a focus on Indigenous adults residing in Canada, Aotearoa and the United States, and that included empirical qualitative data that described at least one aspect of wellbeing were eligible. Data were analysed using the stages of thematic development recommended by Thomas and Harden for thematic synthesis of qualitative research. Our search resulted in 2669 papers being screened for eligibility. Following full-text screening, 100 papers were deemed eligible for inclusion (Aotearoa (New Zealand) n = 16, Canada n = 43, United States n = 41). Themes varied across countries; however, identity, connection, balance and self-determination were common aspects of wellbeing. Having this broader understanding of wellbeing across these cultures can inform decisions made about public health actions and resources.Entities:
Keywords: First Nations; QoL; culture; indigenous health and wellbeing; indigenous people/s; quality of life; well-being; wellbeing
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34071636 PMCID: PMC8198891 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18115832
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Search terms.
| Indigenous | Quality of Life | Limiters |
|---|---|---|
| “American Indian *” OR “First Nation *” OR “First people *” OR Indigenous OR Inuit * OR Māori * OR Maori * OR “Native American *” OR ((Canadian OR Canada) AND Aborigin *) OR “native Canadian” OR “Indigenous population *” OR Metis OR Métis OR “Alaska * Native” OR “Native Alaska *” OR “Native Hawaiian *” OR tribal (TI/AB) 1 | wellbeing OR well-being OR SEWB OR “quality of life” OR HR-QOL OR HRQOL OR QOL OR wellness (TI/AB) 1 | English, Human, Peer-reviewed, research paper, inception to year 2020 |
1 TI/AB = title and abstract. * truncation symbol.
Figure 1PRISMA schema.
Summary of themes and sub-themes of wellbeing by country.
| Country | Themes | Sub-Themes | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada ( | |||
| Holism/Wholism ( | [ | ||
| Culture ( |
Identity Language | [ | |
| Community and Family ( | [ | ||
| Land and Sea ( | [ | ||
| Resilience ( | [ | ||
| Spirituality and Cultural Medicine ( | [ | ||
| Physical, Mental and Emotional Wellbeing ( | [ | ||
| Aotearoa (New Zealand; | |||
| Māoritanga—identity ( | [ | ||
| Tikanga—Māori customs ( |
Pūrakau (ancient story or legend) and whakatauki (proverb) Iwi (tribal) control, self-determination and autonomy Manaakitanga—to extend aroha (love/compassion) and mana (respect/power) to others Colonisation and Māori–Pākehā (European) relations | [ | |
| Kotahitanga—togetherness and connection ( |
Kaitiakitanga—guardianship of the land Whanaungatanga—relationships, kinships and sense of family connection | [ | |
| Whakapapa—importance of genealogies ( |
Whānau—Family Turangawaewae—sense of place | [ | |
| Wairuatanga—spirituality ( |
Rongoa—Māori medicine Karakia (prayer) waiata (songs), and tohu (signs) | [ | |
| United States ( | |||
| Holism ( | [ | ||
| Culture ( |
Cultural preservation and cultural pride Language Physical activity | [ | |
| Spirituality and Cultural Medicine ( |
Higher power or Energy Cultural medicine | [ | |
| Tribe/Community and Family ( | [ | ||
| Land, Sea and Subsistence-based living ( |
Connection Sacred provider | [ | |
| Resilience ( | [ | ||
| Basic Needs ( | [ | ||
Hierarchy table used to exclude articles and improve consistency of screening.
| Exclusion Reason | If … |
|---|---|
| foreign language | Not English |
| population not relevant | No Indigenous adults (18+) in Canada, Aotearoa (New Zealand) and the United States included in paper |
| wrong publication type | Grey literature, poster abstracts, newspaper articles, case reports and dissertations, opinion piece, position statement |
| disease specific focus | If the study cohort, or the paper itself, has a focus on one specific disease, exclude |
| Systems focus | If the study is looking too narrowly at a specific system—for example a health service—then too narrow for our review |
| nil wellbeing focus | Doesn’t report factors of wellbeing or quality of life |
| review | Systematic or other reviews relevant—for checking ref lists |
| wrong study design | No mention of qualitative results or new empirical data in abstract, and non-relevant reviews |