학술논문

"The Old Ways Are the Old Ways": A Qualitative Study of Chinese Medicine Care in Indigenous Communities in Canada.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Integrative & Complementary Medicine. Jun/Jul2023, Vol. 29 Issue 6/7, p380-385. 6p.
Subject
*HERBAL medicine
*RESEARCH methodology
*ACUPUNCTURE
*MEDICAL care
*TRANSCULTURAL medical care
*INTERVIEWING
*HEALTH literacy
*ETHNOLOGY research
*QUALITATIVE research
*SPIRITUAL healing
*ABORIGINAL Canadians
*ALTERNATIVE medicine
*STATISTICAL sampling
*THEMATIC analysis
*CHINESE medicine
Language
ISSN
2768-3605
Abstract
Objectives: Owing to colonization's impacts, Indigenous Peoples in Canada face a disproportionate share of health challenges and suffer inequitable access to health care today. In recent years, an increasing number of Indigenous-led health services have emerged, which—informed by decolonial principles, including "culture-as-cure"—holistically center local Indigenous cultural, spiritual, and healing knowledges and practices. Aligned with decolonial principles, this work examines the delivery of Chinese Medicine (CM) care—an East Asian Indigenous therapeutic approach—in Indigenous communities in British Columbia, Canada. Design: Informed by qualitative interviews with three licensed CM practitioners and one biomedical clinician working in such clinics, the work provides a descriptive account of clinical operations, and thematically explores operational successes and challenges. Results: Four CM clinical programs were identified, all operating on First Nations reserves, including settings at multidisciplinary community health centers, a First Nation Band Council office, and a school gymnasium. Most CM care was delivered free of charge, funded variously by nonprofit agency donations and provincial government reimbursement. Three central themes emerged across the study interviews. The first, transculturalism, emphasizes the conceptual overlap between CM and Indigenous belief systems in the Canadian context, which participants described as a source of strength in building trust for CM care as a nonlocal Indigenous therapeutic approach. The second theme, Cultural Humility, characterizes non-Indigenous practitioners' respectful outlook as guests on Indigenous land, taking community members' lead as to how they might best serve. The final theme, Multidimensional Healing, explores the physical, mental, and emotional healing that practitioners witnessed across their work. Conclusions: Despite economic and logistical challenges, study respondents expressed optimism about the potential for similar traditional medicine clinics to provide culturally resonant primary care in other underserved communities. Further research to learn about the experiences of First Nations community members receiving CM care is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]