Culturally responsive occupational therapy practice with First Nations Peoples—A scoping review

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Title

Australian Journal of Rural Health

Volume

32

Issue

4

First Page

617

Last Page

671

Publisher

Wiley

School

School of Nursing and Midwifery

RAS ID

71515

Comments

Meechan, E., Geia, L., Taylor, M., Murray, D., Stothers, K., Gibson, P., ... & Barker, R. (2024). Culturally responsive occupational therapy practice with First Nations Peoples—A scoping review. Australian Journal of Rural Health, 32(4), 617-671. https://doi.org/10.1111/ajr.13143

Abstract

Introduction: First Nations Peoples consistently demonstrate strength and resilience in navigating systemic health care inequities. Acknowledging racism as a health determinant underscores the urgent need for a counterforce—cultural safety. Indigenous Allied Health Australia (IAHA) contends that with cultural responsiveness, the health workforce can take action to create a culturally safe environment. Objective: To explore features of culturally responsive occupational therapy (OT) practice when providing a service with First Nations People and examine alignment of those features with the IAHA Cultural Responsiveness in Action Framework. Design: A systematic scoping review was undertaken using CINAHL, Emcare, MEDLINE, PsychInfo and Scopus databases. Examples of culturally responsive OT practice with First Nations Peoples were mapped to the six IAHA Framework capabilities and confirmed by First Nations co-authors. Findings: OT practice with First Nations Peoples aligned with the six capabilities to varying degrees. The importance of OTs establishing relationships with First Nations People, applying self-reflection to uncover cultural biases, and addressing limitations of the profession's Western foundations was evident. Discussion: Recognising the interrelatedness of the six capabilities, the absence of some may result in a culturally unsafe experience for First Nations People. OTs must acknowledge the leadership of First Nations Peoples by privileging their voices and consider how established practices may reinforce oppressive systems. Conclusion: To ensure a culturally safe environment for First Nations People, the OT profession must respect the leadership of First Nations Peoples and address the limitations of the profession's Western foundations to uphold the profession's core value of client-centred care.

DOI

10.1111/ajr.13143

Access Rights

subscription content

Share

 
COinS