Four non-Indigenous academics share lessons learned through our reflective processes while working with Indigenous Australian partners on a health research project. We foregrounded reflexivity in our work to raise consciousness regarding how colonizing mindsets-that do not privilege Indigenous ways of knowing or recognize Indigenous land and sovereignty-exist within ourselves and the institutions within which we operate. We share our self-analyses and invite non-Indigenous colleagues to also consider socialized, unquestioned, and possibly unconscious assumptions about the dominance of Western paradigms, asking what contributions, if any, non-Indigenous researchers can offer toward decolonizing health research. Our processes comprise of three iterative features-prioritizing attempts to decolonize ourselves, acknowledging the necessary role of discomfort in doing so, and moving through nonbinary and toward nondualistic thinking. With a nondual lens, working to decolonize ourselves may be seen as one contribution non-Indigenous researchers may offer to the collective project of decolonizing health research.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1049732319861932 | DOI Listing |
J Nephrol
January 2025
School of Nursing, Curtin University, Kent Street, Bentley, WA, 6102, Australia.
Background: Advanced chronic kidney disease is a life-limiting disease that is known to benefit from palliative care. Unmet palliative care need in patients with kidney failure is commonly reported but the level of need among patients receiving haemodialysis is unknown.
Methods: A period prevalence study of adult patients attending two hospital-based dialysis units was conducted.
J Mol Diagn
January 2025
Clinical Research and Technological Development Division, Brazilian National Cancer Institute, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Electronic address:
This article examines the frequency distribution of tier 1 pharmacogenetic variants of the Association for Molecular Pathology Pharmacogenomics Working Group Recommendations in two large (>1000 individuals) cohorts of the admixed Brazilian population, and in patients from the Brazilian Public Health System enrolled in pharmacogenetic trials. Three tier 1 variants, all in DPYD, were consistently absent, which may justify their noninclusion in genotyping panels for Brazilians; 13 variants had frequency ≤1.0%, and the remaining 21 variants ranged in frequency from 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Open Respir Res
January 2025
Darwin Respiratory and Sleep Health, Darwin Private Hospital, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia.
Background: Globally, adult Indigenous people, including Aboriginal Australians, have a high burden of chronic respiratory disorders, and bronchiectasis is no exception. However, literature detailing bronchiectasis disease characteristics among adult Indigenous people is sparse. This study assessed the clinical profile of bronchiectasis among adult Aboriginal Australians and compared against previously published international bronchiectasis registry reports.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAust N Z J Public Health
December 2024
Population Health, Hunter New England Local Health District, New South Wales, Australia; Euahlayi nation.
Objective: This study assessed the effectiveness of Aboriginal-led vaccine workshops to enhance knowledge, confidence and supportive conversations regarding scheduled and recommended vaccinations for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in Hunter New England, New South Wales, Australia.
Methods: We adapted and indigenised an existing vaccine conversation program. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and non-Indigenous people were recruited to workshops delivered either online or face to face.
J Am Geriatr Soc
January 2025
University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.
Background: International recognition of the increasing importance of care for older people has seen growing interest in models of care for older people. Yet there is limited information about the scope and breadth of models of care for older people. This article clarifies what is known about models of care for older people by summarizing relevant publications, describing the models depicted in these publications, and synthesizing the outcomes and impact presented in the publications.
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