| Literature DB >> 34868740 |
Nadine Ijaz1, Michelle Steinberg2, Tami Flaherty3, Tania Neubauer4, Ariana Thompson-Lastad5.
Abstract
This work calls on healthcare institutions and organizations to move toward inclusive recognition and representation of healthcare practitioners whose credibility is established both inside and outside of professional licensure mechanisms. Despite professional licensure's advantages, this credentialing mechanism has in many cases served to reinforce unjust sociocultural power relations in relation to ethnicity and race, class and gender. To foster health equity and the delivery of culturally-responsive care, it is essential that mechanisms other than licensure be recognized as legitimate pathways for community accountability, safety and quality assurance. Such mechanisms include certification with non-statutory occupational bodies, as well as community-based recognition pathways such as those engaged for Community Health Workers (including Promotores de Salud) and Indigenous healing practitioners. Implementation of this vision will require interdisciplinary dialogue and reconciliation, constructive collaboration, and shared decision making between healthcare institutions and organizations, practitioners and the communities they serve.Entities:
Keywords: Delivery of health care; community health workers; complementary medicine; culturally-congruent care; health services; indigenous; interprofessional relations; traditional medicine
Year: 2021 PMID: 34868740 PMCID: PMC8640330 DOI: 10.1177/21649561211043092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Adv Health Med ISSN: 2164-9561