This article describes 19 semi-structured interviews with medical practitioners working in the Northern Territory of Australia. The interviews explored the practitioners' perceptions of the differences between Aboriginal and Western beliefs about disease causation and death. The interviews further explored how these perceptions affected the practitioners' communication of mortality information and their response to the practical and legal tasks of reporting deaths to the coroner, requesting postmortems and certifying death. Two key themes emerged. The first was the variety of interpretations placed by medical practitioners on the concept of "respect", and the difficulty they had in showing that respect in light of competing Western legal an...
The following article presents findings from a study conducted in the Northern Territory of Australi...
Although the incidence of cancer in Indigenous peoples is similar to its incidence in the overall Au...
Between 1 January 1980 and 31 May 1989, ninety-nine Aboriginal and Tones Strait Islander people died...
The rich data drawn from a study to develop an innovative model for Indigenous palliative care are p...
The rich data drawn from a study to develop an innovative model for Indigenous palliative care are p...
The work presented in this thesis is a descriptive and critical study of the production and use of m...
Objectives: To explore communication issues faced by health care workers and indigenous patients an...
There is a significant cultural gap between westernized Australian and Aboriginal cultures, especial...
The investigation of death in traditional indigenous communities often involves 'men of high degree'...
The cultural differences between the dominant Anglo-Australian and the Aboriginal Australian groups ...
Introduction: Attention to Aboriginal health has become mandatory in Australian medical education. I...
Death and funeral practices are a constant presence in many Aboriginal Australians’ lives— research ...
Background: Markedly poorer outcomes from cancer for Indigenous Australians need to be systematicall...
The following article presents findings from a study conducted in the Northern Territory of Australi...
Although the incidence of cancer in Indigenous peoples is similar to its incidence in the overall Au...
The following article presents findings from a study conducted in the Northern Territory of Australi...
Although the incidence of cancer in Indigenous peoples is similar to its incidence in the overall Au...
Between 1 January 1980 and 31 May 1989, ninety-nine Aboriginal and Tones Strait Islander people died...
The rich data drawn from a study to develop an innovative model for Indigenous palliative care are p...
The rich data drawn from a study to develop an innovative model for Indigenous palliative care are p...
The work presented in this thesis is a descriptive and critical study of the production and use of m...
Objectives: To explore communication issues faced by health care workers and indigenous patients an...
There is a significant cultural gap between westernized Australian and Aboriginal cultures, especial...
The investigation of death in traditional indigenous communities often involves 'men of high degree'...
The cultural differences between the dominant Anglo-Australian and the Aboriginal Australian groups ...
Introduction: Attention to Aboriginal health has become mandatory in Australian medical education. I...
Death and funeral practices are a constant presence in many Aboriginal Australians’ lives— research ...
Background: Markedly poorer outcomes from cancer for Indigenous Australians need to be systematicall...
The following article presents findings from a study conducted in the Northern Territory of Australi...
Although the incidence of cancer in Indigenous peoples is similar to its incidence in the overall Au...
The following article presents findings from a study conducted in the Northern Territory of Australi...
Although the incidence of cancer in Indigenous peoples is similar to its incidence in the overall Au...
Between 1 January 1980 and 31 May 1989, ninety-nine Aboriginal and Tones Strait Islander people died...