Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Recreating the future—Indigenous research paradigms in health professional education research
View through CrossRef
AbstractIntroductionHealth and self‐determination are recognised as universal human rights. Health professional education research and practice hold the capacity to prioritise values, worldviews and agendas that envisage sustainable and equitable futures for the entire community served. This paper explores the need for the co‐location of Indigenous research paradigms in health professional education research and teaching. Indigenous communities have a long history of science, research and sustainable living and are holders of ways of knowing, being and doing that can shape actions and priorities in health research that value equity and sustainability.DiscussionKnowledge construction in health professional education research does not occur in isolation nor is it value neutral. A continued dominance of the biomedical approach to health creates a system of innovation that is unbalanced and unable to deliver health outcomes demanded by contemporary society. As power and hierarchies are embedded in health professional education research and praxis, transformative action is required to bring forth marginalised voices in research processes. Critical reflexivity regarding the ontological, epistemological, axiological and methodological positioning of researchers is an important step towards creating and sustaining research structures that effectively value and co‐locate different perspectives in knowledge production and translation.ConclusionWorking towards more equitable and sustainable futures for Indigenous and non‐Indigenous communities requires health care systems to be informed and guided by different knowledge paradigms. This can work to avoid the ongoing reproduction of inefficient biomedical structures and purposefully disrupt the status quo of health inequities. Realising this requires the effective co‐location of Indigenous research paradigms and ways of working into health professional education research that centre relationality, wholism, interconnectedness and self‐determination. This calls for a raising of the critical consciousness of health professional education research academies.
Title: Recreating the future—Indigenous research paradigms in health professional education research
Description:
AbstractIntroductionHealth and self‐determination are recognised as universal human rights.
Health professional education research and practice hold the capacity to prioritise values, worldviews and agendas that envisage sustainable and equitable futures for the entire community served.
This paper explores the need for the co‐location of Indigenous research paradigms in health professional education research and teaching.
Indigenous communities have a long history of science, research and sustainable living and are holders of ways of knowing, being and doing that can shape actions and priorities in health research that value equity and sustainability.
DiscussionKnowledge construction in health professional education research does not occur in isolation nor is it value neutral.
A continued dominance of the biomedical approach to health creates a system of innovation that is unbalanced and unable to deliver health outcomes demanded by contemporary society.
As power and hierarchies are embedded in health professional education research and praxis, transformative action is required to bring forth marginalised voices in research processes.
Critical reflexivity regarding the ontological, epistemological, axiological and methodological positioning of researchers is an important step towards creating and sustaining research structures that effectively value and co‐locate different perspectives in knowledge production and translation.
ConclusionWorking towards more equitable and sustainable futures for Indigenous and non‐Indigenous communities requires health care systems to be informed and guided by different knowledge paradigms.
This can work to avoid the ongoing reproduction of inefficient biomedical structures and purposefully disrupt the status quo of health inequities.
Realising this requires the effective co‐location of Indigenous research paradigms and ways of working into health professional education research that centre relationality, wholism, interconnectedness and self‐determination.
This calls for a raising of the critical consciousness of health professional education research academies.
Related Results
Tlacoqualli in Monequi "The Center Good"
Tlacoqualli in Monequi "The Center Good"
Photo by Andrew James on Unsplash
INTRODUCTION
Since its inception, bioethics has focused on Western conceptions of ethics and science. This has provided a strong foundation to bui...
Reclaiming the Wasteland: Samson and Delilah and the Historical Perception and Construction of Indigenous Knowledges in Australian Cinema
Reclaiming the Wasteland: Samson and Delilah and the Historical Perception and Construction of Indigenous Knowledges in Australian Cinema
It was always based on a teenage love story between the two kids. One is a sniffer and one is not. It was designed for Central Australia because we do write these kids off there. N...
Contemporary Indigenous Social and Political Thought
Contemporary Indigenous Social and Political Thought
The contemporary continental emergence of a significant number of indigenous intellectuals who have been trained in the academic fields of social sciences (history, anthropology, s...
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The UP Manila Health Policy Development Hub recognizes the invaluable contribution of the participants in theseries of roundtable discussions listed below:
RTD: Beyond Hospit...
Paradigms in International and Cross-Cultural Management Research
Paradigms in International and Cross-Cultural Management Research
Paradigms exist and have always existed everywhere—assumptions about the world and how it works: Is the Earth round or flat? Is the Earth or the Sun at the center of the universe? ...
Indigeneity
Indigeneity
It is estimated that Indigenous peoples total 476 million, belong to over five thousand ethnocultural groups across up to ninety countries, and speak around four thousand languages...
Indigenous Rights
Indigenous Rights
The attention given to indigenous rights has increased since the approval of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) in 2007. Although it is a s...
Opinions and perceptions of Indigenous mental health applications from service providers and youth samples: a pilot study
Opinions and perceptions of Indigenous mental health applications from service providers and youth samples: a pilot study
Objective To evaluate opinions and perceptions around managing mental health and the relevance of available mental health applications (apps) for Indigenous youth populations by s...

