Tangled pasts, healthier futures: Nursing strategies to improve American Indian/Alaska Native health equity
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Final Accepted Manuscript
Affiliation
Univ Arizona, Coll NursingUniv Arizona, Coll Nursing, Dept Mexican Amer Studies, Inst LGBT Studies
Issue Date
2020-06-16Keywords
Native Americancultural safety
education
health status disparities
History
leadership
nursing
Nursing Care
Social justice
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WILEYCitation
Pool, NM, Stauber, LS. Tangled pasts, healthier futures: Nursing strategies to improve American Indian/Alaska Native health equity. Nurs Inq. 2020; 00:e12367. https://doi.org/10.1111/nin.12367Journal
NURSING INQUIRYRights
© 2020 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Collection Information
This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.Abstract
American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) populations in the United States continue to experience overall health inequity, despite significant improvement in health status for nearly all other racial-ethnic groups over the past 30 years. Nurses comprise the bulk of healthcare providers in the U.S. and are in an optimal position to improve AI/AN health by transforming both nursing education and practice. This potential is dependent, however, on nurses' ability to recognize the distinct historical and political conditions through which AI/AN health inequities have been produced and sustained. Nurse providers, educators, and leaders must in turn recognize how the sustained conditions of marginalization and expropriation that underpin current AI/AN health inequities continue to shape contemporary AI/AN health outcomes. This manuscript builds upon the extant literature of AI/AN historical health policy and utilizes decolonial theorizations of nursing and a cultural safety framework to propose a series of immediately actionable steps for nursing intervention into AI/AN health inequity. Ultimately, we suggest that it is crucial for nurses to collaborate with AI/AN individuals and communities across educational and clinical settings to further refine these approaches in alignment with the disciplinary obligation of promoting social justice within healthcare.Note
12 month embargo; published online: 16 June 2020ISSN
1320-7881EISSN
1440-1800PubMed ID
32548947Version
Final accepted manuscriptae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1111/nin.12367
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