Negotiating Culturally Incongruent Healthcare Systems: The Process of Accessing Dementia Care in Northern Saskatchewan

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Database ID25737
InstitutionUniversity of Saskatchewan Libraries Special Collections
Fonds/CollectionUniversity of Saskatchewan Library Theses and Dissertations
File/Item Referenceetd-12192006-160831
Date of creation2006
Physical description/extent1 thesis; 124 pages
Number of images124
External URLhttp://library2.usask.ca/theses/available/etd-12192006-160831/unrestricted/cammer_a.pdf
Scope and contentThis study is an exploration of the process of accessing dementia care for Aboriginal Older Adults living in Northern Saskatchewan. The research question for this project was, "What is the process of accessing formal healthcare for dementia from the perspective of Northern Saskatchewan Aboriginal communities, and what factors specifically impede or encourage accessing formal care?" Grounded theory methodology informed the research process. Theoretical sampling resulted in a sample of thirty participants. Data were generated through eighteen in-person, semi-structured interviews; two in-person, semi-structured group interviews; and three focus group discussions including a directed activity led by participants. Analysis of data using the grounded theory constant comparison method led to an emergent theory that was verified by research participants. The theory that emerged explains the basic social process at the heart of the research question. The grounded theory, "The process of negotiating culturally incongruent healthcare systems" explains the access to and use of formal healthcare from the perspective of those living in Northern Saskatchewan. Specific attention to the social context of healthcare access helped to illuminate the challenges faced by Aboriginal Older Adults when accessing healthcare services. The findings indicate a need for enhancing the cultural competence of healthcare provision to Older Adults with dementia in Northern Saskatchewan while providing formal support for those persons with dementia as well as for their informal caregivers.
Restrictions on accessThere are no restrictions on access.
ContributerCammer, Allison Lee (author)
University of Saskatchewan. Department of Community Health and Epidemiology (Supervisory department / submitted to)
Copyright holderCammer, Allison Lee
Other terms governing use and reproductionPermission given for on-line access.
TypeTheses
Primary MediaTextual documents
Provenance Access PointUniversity of Saskatchewan Library. Theses and Dissertations
Treaty boundariesNo data
Cultural regionSubarctic
SubjectHealth
Date Range(s)2000-
Permanent Link https://digital.scaa.sk.ca/ourlegacy/permalink/25737