Exploring Aboriginal peoples’ experience of relocation for treatment during end-of-life care
- 1 March 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Mark Allen Group in International Journal of Palliative Nursing
- Vol. 12 (3) , 102-108
- https://doi.org/10.12968/ijpn.2006.12.3.20692
Abstract
Aim To explore indigenous peoples’ experience of relocation for medical treatment during end-of-life care. Methods The data were collected from 72 qualitative interviews conducted throughout the regional, rural and remote areas of the Northern Territory, Australia, with Aboriginal patients and carers and the health professionals who cared for them. Results Relocation for indigenous peoples is a frightening experience. There are a myriad of fears including: the fear of leaving home, especially for people who had never been away from their homelands; the fear of disempowerment associated with leaving the support of family networks; fears about hospital environments and ‘high-tech’ treatments; fear of cultural alienation for familiar foods and ways of being; fear of travel; fear of loneliness; fear of language and communication barriers; financial fears; and fear of dying away from the homeland. Conclusion The findings demonstrate the strong need for building-up local palliative care services and raise significant questions about the cultural appropriateness of the Western biomedical rationale for relocation during end-of-life care.Keywords
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