Improving Breast Cancer Outcomes for Indigenous Women in Australia
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
1.1. Breast Cancer in Indigenous Women in Australia
1.2. Context
1.3. Research into Breast Cancer Policy and Practice for Indigenous Women in Australia
1.4. Health Information Fluency
1.5. Study Novelty
2. Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Procedures and Assessment
2.3. Protocol Selection
3. Results
- Improved health information fluency regarding the importance of screening and early detection and ensuring this is delivered in a culturally safe way.
- Increased cultural safety and access to screening services.
- Presence of Indigenous health service providers at screening and follow-up support
- Ensuring the health service provider is local and/or familiar with Indigenous culture and community.
- Culturally safe screening, diagnosis, treatment and follow-up settings.
- Local Indigenous screening champions in the community.
- Protocols for abnormal results are culturally safe and tailored to the local setting and community.
- Culturally safe support is available for people who receive diagnoses.
- The policy is re-written in consultation with Indigenous people and provides solutions to improve health outcomes.
4. Discussion
- The participation of the community in research and being researchers of one’s own concerns.
- Incorporation of culturally safe approaches in research design.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Level | Context (If) | Outcome (Then) | Mechanism (Because) | Ultimate Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|
Micro | Indigenous participants understand the importance of screening and early detection | More likely to attend screening | They are motivated to find out more and feel involved | 1. Indigenous women attend routine breast cancer screening at the same/better rate than non-Indigenous women 2. Indigenous women are diagnosed with breast cancer earlier 3. Mortality rates from breast cancer for Indigenous women are comparable to those of non-Indigenous women in Australia |
Indigenous participants feel safe accessing screening services | More screening is likely to occur | Indigenous peoples find it culturally safe and welcoming | ||
Providers/support staff are of similar background (Indigenous) | Indigenous clients are more likely to attend screening | Clients are more likely to understand and trust provider/support staff | ||
Providers are local and familiar with Indigenous culture and community | Provider likely to encourage clients for screening | Providers are likely to understand local needs, customs and culture | ||
Meso | The screening setting is culturally safe | Clients are more likely to attend screening | Clients are more likely to get early diagnosis | |
Providers have screening champions in community | Clients are more likely to attend | Local champions convince their peers/fellow community members | ||
There are culturally safe, tailored protocols for abnormal results catering to setting and community | Clients are more likely to access treatment | Screening results have a clearly outlined treatment/follow-up plan | ||
There are support services available for people who receive diagnoses | Clients are more likely to adhere to treatment recommendations | Clients feel supported and culturally safe | ||
Macro | The policy is rewritten in consultation with Indigenous people and provides solutions to the acknowledged issues | Resources and funding will be provided to enact the policy, and service provision will be modified to be more culturally safe | Clients feel welcome and are more likely to engage with early detection and treatment services |
Level | Context (If) | Outcome (Then) | Mechanism (Because) | Ultimate Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|
Micro | Indigenous clients do not understand the preventive and early intervention benefits of routine breast screening | More likely to not screen | Participants fear the implications of results | Low rates of screening and detection will continue, and mortality rates will not improve. |
Indigenous participants do not feel safe accessing screening services | Less likely to screen | Cultural safety improves attendance and adherence | ||
Providers/support staff are not of a similar background (Indigenous) | Indigenous clients are less likely to attend screening | Indigenous clients are less likely to trust non-Indigenous staff | ||
Providers are not local and not familiar with Indigenous culture and community | Indigenous clients do not feel comfortable and will avoid seeing their provider | Providers are less likely to understand local needs, customs and culture | ||
Meso | The screening setting is not culturally safe | Clients less likely to attend screening | Clients are less likely to get an early diagnosis | |
Providers do not have screening champions in community | Clients are less likely to attend | Local champions convince their peers/fellow community members | ||
There are not culturally safe, tailored protocols for abnormal results catering to setting and community | Clients are less likely to access treatment | Clients are less likely to feel comfortable and welcome | ||
There are no support services available for people who receive diagnoses | Clients are less likely to adhere to treatment recommendations | Clients are more likely to adhere when feeling supported | ||
Macro | Policy is not written by and in consultation with Indigenous people and does not change | Service provision remains culturally unsafe | Clients do not feel welcome and are not more likely to engage with early detection and treatment services |
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Share and Cite
Christie, V.; Riley, L.; Green, D.; Amin, J.; Skinner, J.; Pyke, C.; Gwynne, K. Improving Breast Cancer Outcomes for Indigenous Women in Australia. Cancers 2024, 16, 1736. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16091736
Christie V, Riley L, Green D, Amin J, Skinner J, Pyke C, Gwynne K. Improving Breast Cancer Outcomes for Indigenous Women in Australia. Cancers. 2024; 16(9):1736. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16091736
Chicago/Turabian StyleChristie, Vita, Lynette Riley, Deb Green, Janaki Amin, John Skinner, Chris Pyke, and Kylie Gwynne. 2024. "Improving Breast Cancer Outcomes for Indigenous Women in Australia" Cancers 16, no. 9: 1736. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16091736
APA StyleChristie, V., Riley, L., Green, D., Amin, J., Skinner, J., Pyke, C., & Gwynne, K. (2024). Improving Breast Cancer Outcomes for Indigenous Women in Australia. Cancers, 16(9), 1736. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16091736