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Kaumātua Mana Motuhake: peer education intervention to help Māori elders during later-stage life transitions

机译:特别作者:同伴教育发明,帮助毛利人在后期阶段的生活过渡期间

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Aotearoa/New Zealand has a population that is ageing and there are challenges to health and social outcomes related to related to key life transitions (e.g., retirement, change in health conditions, loss of spouse). Further, there are significant inequities between Māori (Indigenous people) and non-Māori in ageing outcomes. The purpose of this study was to test the impacts and cost effectiveness of a tuakana/teina (peer education) intervention on kaumātua (elders) receiving the intervention. This study was framed by a strengths-based approach based on the key cultural concept of mana motuhake (autonomy and self-actualisation). This study was grounded in principles of Kaupapa Māori and community-based participatory research to bring together a diverse group of stakeholders to co-develop and co-evaluate the intervention. The intervention had tuakana (peer educators) having conversations with up to six teina (recipients) and providing information related to health and social services. The research design was a pre- and post-test, clustered staggered design. Participants completed a baseline assessment of health and mana motuhake measures consistent with Māori worldviews along with two follow-up assessments (one after the first intervention group completed its activities and a second after the?second intervention group completed its activities). Additionally, five focus groups and open-ended questions on the assessments were used to provide qualitative evaluation. A total of 180 kaumātua were recruited to the intervention with 121 completing it. The analysis revealed improvements over time in the expected direction on most of the variables. However, only three of the variables had statistically significant intervention effects: received support, tribal identity, and trouble paying bills. Qualitative results supported impacts of the intervention on mana motuhake, social connectedness, and tangible/information support related to services. Cost-effectiveness analysis showed that the intervention is cost effective, with a cost per QALY of less than the conventional threshold of three times gross domestic product per capita. The findings support the relevancy and importance of kaumātua knowledge to create a strengths-based approach to improve health and social outcomes. This study demonstrates that a contextually based and culturally safe age-friendly environments can facilitate engagement and participation by kaumātua for kaumātua.
机译:AOTEAROA / New Zealand有一个老龄化的人口,与关键生活过渡有关的卫生和社会成果有挑战(例如,退休,卫生条件的变化,失去配偶)。此外,毛利人(土着人民)和非毛利语之间存在显着的不等性。本研究的目的是测试Tuakana / Teina(同伴教育)干预的影响和成本效益,以获得干预的Kaumātua(长老)。本研究采用了基于优势的方法来框架,基于法力麦瓜(自治和自我实现)的关键文化概念。本研究基于Kaupapa毛利和基于社区的参与性研究的基础,使各种利益攸关方汇集在一起​​,共同开发和共同评估干预。干预有Tuakana(同伴教育者),具有多达六名Teina(接受者)的对话,并提供与健康和社会服务有关的信息。研究设计是一个预先测试,集群交错的设计。与会者完成了对卫生和法力摩托的措施的基线评估与毛利世界观一致的措施以及两个后续评估(第一次干预小组完成其活动之后,第二个干预小组完成其活动后)。此外,用于评估的五个焦点小组和开放式问题用于提供定性评估。共有180个Kaumātua被招募到121次完成它的干预。分析显示在大多数变量上的预期方向上随着时间的推移而改进。但是,只有三个变量具有统计上显着的干预效果:获得的支持,部落身份和支付账单的麻烦。定性结果支持对与服务有关的法力仓,社会关联和有形/信息支持的影响。成本效益分析表明,干预措施是具有成本效益的,每QALY的成本低于常规阈值的每人均国内生产总值的三倍。调查结果支持Kaumātua知识的相关性和重要性,以创造一个基于优势的方法来改善健康和社会结果。本研究表明,基于上下文和文化安全的年龄友好的环境可以促进Kaumātua的竞争和参与Kaumātua。

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