Nurturing care and protection from parents and community in the early years of life are fundamental for a child's development. The article aims to explore what relations parents see as meaningful in their child's upbringing and how these are shaped, and how these perspectives are reflected in MANU.…
Nurturing care and protection from parents and community in the early years of life are fundamental for a child's development. The article aims to explore what relations parents see as meaningful in their child's upbringing and how these are shaped, and how these perspectives are reflected in MANU. MANU is a universal parenting programme in Greenland. Ten of 40 interviews with parents were selected for the analysis of this article's objective. Five grandparents were interviewed. Grandparents are the child's closest extended family members and provide support to parents. Parents placed between one to 19 extended family members in their child's network. Eating and being in nature together, along with familial and intergenerational connectedness, were deemed valuable and important aspects in child-rearing. Parents? own experiences in childhood can influence and complicate how parents place their new family within the extended family. The MANU materials address aspects in the role of kin that parents and grandparents described in interviews. The format and delivery of MANU aims to be universal and mostly addresses Western epistemologies, but both Western and Inuit epistemologies coexists in Greenland. This article creates a window into the existing context parents navigate in. It is important that initiatives are built within this context to ensure they are relevant to families.
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Forfatter:
Christine Ingemann; Ingelise Olesen; Else Jensen; Tine Tjørnhøj-Thomsen; Christina Viskum Lytken Larsen; Siv Kvernmo
Årstal:
2023
Emner:
Parenting programme; Qualitative methods; Child-rearing; Kinship; Indigenous; Arctic; Circumpolar
Titel på tidsskrift:
International Journal of Circumpolar Health
Volumen af tidsskriftet:
82
DOI nummer:
10.1080/22423982.2023.2225720
Objectives: Patient experiences with health systems constitute a crucial pillar of quality care. Across the Arctic, patients’ interactions with the healthcare system are influenced by challenges of access, historical inequities and social determinants. This scoping review sought to describe the rang…
Objectives: Patient experiences with health systems constitute a crucial pillar of quality care. Across the Arctic, patients’ interactions with the healthcare system are influenced by challenges of access, historical inequities and social determinants. This scoping review sought to describe the range and nature of peer-reviewed literature on patient experience studies conducted within the circumpolar region.
Design: In a partnership between Danish/Greenlandic, Canadian and American research teams, a scoping review of published research exploring patient experiences in circumpolar regions was undertaken.
Data sources: Seven electronic databases were queried: MEDLINE, Embase, Scopus, ‘Global Health 1910 to 2019 Week 11’, CINAHL, PsycINFO and SveMed+.
Eligibility criteria: Articles were eligible for inclusion if they (a) took place in the circumpolar region, (b) reported patients’ perspective and (c) were focussed primarily on patient experiences with care, rather than satisfaction with treatment outcome.
Data extraction and synthesis: Title and abstract screening, full-text review and data extraction was conducted by four researchers. Bibliometric information such as publication date and country of origin was extracted, as was information regarding study design and whether or not the article contained results relevant to the themes of Indigenous values, rural and remote context, telehealth and climate change. Two researchers then synthesised and characterised results relevant to these themes.
Results: Of the 2824 articles initially found through systematic searches in seven databases, 96 articles were included for data extraction. Findings from the review included unique features related to Indigenous values, rural and remote health, telehealth and climate change.
Conclusions: The review findings provide an overview of patient experiences measures used in circumpolar nations. These findings can be used to inform health system improvement based on patient needs in the circumpolar context, as well as in other regions that share common features. This work can be further contextualized through Indigenous methodologies such as sharing circles and community based participatory methods.
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Forfatter:
Christine Ingemann; Nathaniel Fox Hansen; Nanna Lund Hansen; Kennedy Jensen; Christina Viskum Lytken Larsen; Susan Chatwood
Årstal:
2020
Emner:
Patient experience; Patient satisfaction; Circumpolar; Arctic; Scoping review; Indigenous; Rural healthcare; Tele-health
Titel på tidsskrift:
BMJopen
DOI nummer:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-042973
This symposium report provides a brief overview of the six programmes and studies on parental education and maternal health services within the circumpolar region presented in the symposium “parental education” at the 17th International Congress of Circumpolar Health in Copenhagen, Denmark, August 2…
This symposium report provides a brief overview of the six programmes and studies on parental education and maternal health services within the circumpolar region presented in the symposium “parental education” at the 17th International Congress of Circumpolar Health in Copenhagen, Denmark, August 2018.
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Forfatter:
Christine Ingemann; Siv Kvernmo; Helle Møller; Pertice M Moffitt; Shirley Tagalik; Rikke L Kuhn; Siv E Nilsen; Rebecca Rich; Christina Viskum Lytken Larsen
Årstal:
2019
Emner:
Parental education; Perinatal; Maternity; Traditional knowledge; Indigenous; Arctic; Circumpolar health
Udgiver:
International Journal of Circumpolar Health
DOI nummer:
https://doi.org/10.1080/22423982.2019.1604062
Konferencenavn:
17th International Congress of Circumpolar Health 2018
Konferenceby:
Copenhagen
Konferenceland:
Denmark
Citizenship of Indigenous Greenlanders in a European Nation State – And excluded offenders of domestic violence
Editor:
Lena Dominelli; Mehmoona Moosa-Mitha
Årstal:
2014
Emner:
Citizenship; Indigenous; Greenland; Domestic violence
Titel på værtspublikation:
Reconfiguring Citizenship
Udgiver:
Ashgate