Best Practices for Effective Clinical Partnerships with Indigenous Populations of North America (American Indian, Alaska Native, First Nations, Métis, and Inuit)

The Nursing Clinics of North America
Emily A Haozous, Charles Neher

Abstract

This article presents a review of the literature to identify best practices for clinical partnerships with indigenous populations of North America, specifically American Indian/Alaska Native, First Nations, Métis, and Inuit of Canada. The authors have identified best practices and lessons learned from collaborating with indigenous populations, presented in 2 categories: conceptual guidelines and health care delivery guidelines. Major themes include the importance of trust and communication, the delivery of culturally congruent health care, and the necessity of working in partnership with tribal entities for successful delivery of health care. Best practices in health care delivery with indigenous populations are presented.

References

Jan 1, 1995·American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research : the Journal of the National Center·R M Scurfield
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May 18, 2013·American Journal of Public Health·Vanessa W Simonds, Suzanne Christopher
Jun 26, 2013·Progress in Community Health Partnerships : Research, Education, and Action·Lola T BaydalaLia Ruttan
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Oct 19, 2013·American Journal of Public Health·Allyson KelleyGordon Belcourt
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Apr 24, 2014·American Journal of Public Health·David K EspeyMarcus Plescia

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Citations

Jun 18, 2019·Journal of Transcultural Nursing : Official Journal of the Transcultural Nursing Society·Rebecca CarronRuben Alvero

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