Authors
Jamie‐Lee Rahiri, Jason Tuhoe, Ashlea Gillon, Andrew D MacCormick, Andrew Hill, Matire Harwood
Publication date
2020/4
Journal
ANZ journal of surgery
Volume
90
Issue
4
Pages
508-513
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd
Description
Background
Health equity is a fundamental right afforded to all regardless of ethnicity. However, in New Zealand (NZ), health inequities are most compelling for Indigenous Māori who experience inadequate access to services, poorer quality of care and poor health outcomes as a result. Bariatric surgery is the most effective intervention for weight loss and remission of obesity‐related disease where all other interventions have been exhausted. This Kaupapa Māori qualitative study presents Māori perspectives of bariatric surgery from the largest public bariatric centre in NZ and offers solutions for enhancing bariatric service responsiveness to Māori.
Methods
This qualitative study was informed by Kaupapa Māori methodology and involved a general inductive thematic analysis of 31 semi‐structured interviews with Māori patients who had bariatric surgery at Counties Manukau Health in South Auckland, NZ.
Results …
Total citations
2023202412
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