140 likes | 368 Views
Consolidating our Strengths:. Collaboration as a means to further contemporary Indigenous knowledge. Amohia Boulton, Gill Pirikahu, Jennifer Tamehana INIHKD Conference, Poulsbo, WA, USA 25 May 2010. Overview. The research collaboration Who we are Principles underpinning the collaboration
E N D
Consolidating our Strengths: Collaboration as a means to further contemporary Indigenous knowledge Amohia Boulton, Gill Pirikahu, Jennifer Tamehana INIHKD Conference, Poulsbo, WA, USA 25 May 2010
Overview • The research collaboration • Who we are • Principles underpinning the collaboration • Principles in practice • Progress to date
Research Collaboration • Is the concept of “resilience” relevant in Māori primary health? • Is “resilience” a relevant or useful concept for Māori whānau? • How can whānau resilience be supported and enhanced by Māori primary health services?
Whakauae Research for Māori Health and Development • Ngāti Hauiti - an Iwi (tribe) from Central Rangitikei, Aotearoa • Whakauae - Iwi research unit of/for Ngāti Hauiti • Tribally owned and accountable
Te Oranganui Iwi Health Authority • Inter-tribal organisation governed by 3 Iwi • 141 staff, 6 service entities, 1 support service • Protected by a cultural framework, Te Pitau Whakarae • Pitau Whakarae based on the values and principles encapsulated within the Kaupapa Ake (Vision Statement)
WHANAU ORA – Organisational Driven Service Delivery Model GOVERNANCE Iwi Clinical & Provider ADVISORY Committees Groups C E N T R E O F E X C E L L E N C E MANAGEMENT CEO HR, QIM, Clinical, Cultural & Finance INFORMATION Research Development Analysis OPERATIONS / SERVICES Service Leaders / Managers Front line Primary Health Services SUPPORT Full administration, finance, service assistance MODELLING Service models, Maori health models, Strategies TE PITAU WHAKARAE – Organisational Cultural Quality Framework How these Elements Fit
The Research Collaboration • TOIHA and WRMHD share a whakapapa (genealogical) connection • TOIHA and WRMHD share a kaupapa (project) relationship • Our shared kaupapa - to understand the health and social services and practices required that best support whānau
Principles Underpinning the Work • Kotahitanga – a unity of worldview, purpose and direction • Manākitanga – recognising and respecting each other’s unique contribution • Tiakitanga – acting in a manner which respects the people who participate and for whom the research is being conducted
Kotahitanga – Unity of Purpose • The research topic is an important one for both organisations • Research design and methodology meet the need for academic rigour and community rigour • Joint data collection, analysis, publication, and dissemination
Manākitanga – Unique Contributions • TOIHA • a wealth of experience in service design and delivery • an understanding of their community, of the community’s needs • A “grounded” reality to challenge the thinking of the academics
Manākitanga – Unique Contributions • WRMHD • experience in academic research • an understanding of the needs of policy and funding bodies, in both the research and health sectors • ability to translate Māori community knowledge into palatable findings for the academy and policy
Tiakitanga – Caring for Each Other • Respect for each other’s strengths and abilities • Communication is vital • Respect for participant’s knowledge • Desire for the research to contribute to service improvement and new knowledge
The Story So Far? • Literature review has thrown up some challenges for the project • Conceptually demanding • First round of interviews finished • Beginning dissemination in a range of fora (academic and community-based) • Research and the partnership are progressing well
Acknowledgements • The research participants • TOIHA Board Members • TOIHA Managers and Staff • Whanganui Whānau • The research funders • Health Services Research Centre • WRMHD staff