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Cultural Safety and professional practice in occupational therapy: A New Zealand perspective
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Cultural Safety and professional practice in occupational therapy: A New Zealand perspective

Marion Gray and K McPherson
Australian occupational therapy journal, Vol.52(1), pp.34-42
2005
url
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1440-1630.2004.00433.xView
Published Version

Abstract

Clinical Sciences Public Health and Health Services biculturalism cultural safety health professional practice qualitative research
This research examined occupational therapists' attitudes to Cultural Safety for Maori clients. The main research tool was a semi-structured qualitative research interview. A cross-case analysis method was used to determine the major recurring themes. Thirteen participants with varied occupational therapy training backgrounds were interviewed. Current Cultural Safety education is designed to challenge health professionals' attitudes towards those culturally different from themselves. Results suggest that maturity and personal experiences had significant bearing on these attitudes. Implications for occupational therapy include implementing a policy that stipulates compulsory Cultural Safety education as part of professional development. Findings may have relevance for other countries where significant ethnic differentials in health service success exist, such as Australia.

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