Cultural Safety Collection

Unmet health needs and discrimination by healthcare providers among an Indigenous people with multimorbidity: A respondent-driven sampling study of an urban Indigenous population in Toronto, Canada

2017

Tjensvoll Kitching, G.

Description

This thesis aims to identify factors associated with having unmet health needs and experiencing discrimination by a healthcare provider within an urban Indigenous population living in Toronto, Canada. The study found that unmet health needs were prevalent among this population and that experiences of discrimination by healthcare providers increased the likelihood of having unmet health needs, highlighting the need for healthcare providers to receive cultural safety training.

Link to Resource

Unmet health needs and discrimination by healthcare providers among an Indigenous people with multimorbidity: A respondent-driven sampling study of an urban Indigenous population in Toronto, Canada.

Tjensvoll Kitching, G. (2017). Unmet health needs and discrimination by healthcare providers among an Indigenous people with multimorbidity: A respondent-driven sampling study of an urban Indigenous population in Toronto, Canada [Unpublished Master's thesis in Public Health]. Norwegian University of Science and Technology.

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