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Australian Health Review Australian Health Review Society
Journal of the Australian Healthcare & Hospitals Association
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Open Access)

Experiences of occupational therapy students undertaking an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health module: embedding cultural responsiveness in professional curricula

Lynette Mackenzie https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1597-2051 A * , Josephine Gwynn A and John Gilroy B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Discipline of Occupational Therapy, School of Health Sciences, The University of Sydney, NSW, Australia.

B School of Health Sciences, The University of Sydney, NSW, Australia.

* Correspondence to: Lynette.Mackenzie@sydney.edu.au

Australian Health Review 48(4) 374-380 https://doi.org/10.1071/AH23217
Submitted: 31 October 2023  Accepted: 29 April 2024  Published: 14 May 2024

© 2024 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of AHHA. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND)

Abstract

Objective

Along with other Australian health professionals, occupational therapy students need to understand Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture and health issues to develop their capacity to work effectively with this community and meet accreditation standards. The study aimed to explore the learning experiences of occupational therapy students during a module focused on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health issues and approaches.

Methods

A qualitative descriptive method was used. Individual interviews were audiotaped, transcribed and analysed thematically following the module. Participants were asked about their prior experience with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, feelings about undertaking the module, difficulties and highlights of the module, and how the module contributed to their learning.

Results

In all, 18 students participated in interviews. Interview themes were (1) student context of learning about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ heath and culture, (2) experiencing the module with others and (3) student learning gains following the module.

Conclusion

Students developed in their self-awareness and understanding of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ issues of relevance to occupational therapy. Further research is needed to evaluate educational activities with occupational therapy and other health professional students across Australia, and ongoing culturally responsiveness training for health professionals (post-registration).

Keywords: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, capability, cultural competence, cultural responsiveness, cultural safety, health professional students, Indigenous, occupational therapy.

Introduction

A culturally safe and competent allied health workforce is essential.1,2 Health professional university students need to be able to work with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples safely and respectfully to break down the effects of colonialism and colonisation3 and to facilitate positive interactions with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander clients. The occupational therapy profession has prioritised cultural safety through accreditation standards that recognise competencies in understanding Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ experiences of health, wellbeing and occupations and the need to respond appropriately using culturally responsive practice strategies and respectful communication.4

Cultural responsiveness includes being able to identify and challenge personal cultural assumptions, values and beliefs, and to recognise and respect different cultural views of the world.5 This promotes an understanding of the influences of culture, racism, histories of oppression and other contextual factors6 on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health. Indigenous Allied Health Australia’s cultural responsiveness framework5 defines cultural responsiveness as the way in which health professionals deliver and maintain culturally safe and effective practice, such as focussing on health assets and strengths, using culturally appropriate assessment approaches7 and working together to ensure that intervention is culturally relevant.8 Cultural responsiveness goes beyond cultural safety and cultural competence by describing the actions that are practised to create and maintain a culturally safe service. Adult learning principles are recommended,9 as well as facilitating critical and reflexive learning experiences while ensuring the wellbeing of students.

A scoping review of health professional Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander curricula10 described compulsory units, modules or full-day workshops. Content included historical, political and social aspects of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health, social determinants, cultural safety, racism, equity, cultural health beliefs and issues relevant to specific professional practice. Assessment items included group activities, online quizzes and reflective activities.10 The current study evaluated a module delivered to occupational therapy students at the University of Sydney by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander academic staff and non-Aboriginal occupational therapy academic staff. The unit consisted of 3 h contact per week over 4 weeks. Students worked in groups for the first hour with a case study for their group each week (rural or urban), which developed over the 4 weeks with extra information added each week. Several case studies were used across the groups. They also participated in 2 h workshops led by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander university staff on communication and kinship. The workshops informed the case study activities but were not directly linked. Guest speakers included Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander service providers. Individual assessment tasks included a self-directed module of reflective tasks (pass/fail), and the final assessment task was the development of an occupational therapy position statement on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health (Fig. 1). A pre-module survey encouraged students to reflect on their prior understanding of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ culture and health and to consider any gaps in their knowledge (Supplementary material file S1).

Fig. 1.

Outline of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander module content. OT, occupational therapy.


AH23217_F1.gif

Although the principles of presenting curricula and learning opportunities about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health and culture are known,11 there is little data about how occupational therapy students respond to such learning activities. This paper will describe the findings from interviews with undergraduate and Master’s entry occupational therapy students about their participation in a specialised module on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and practice (Fig. 1). This study aimed to explore the reflections of occupational therapy students about their learning experiences and any extended understanding of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health issues and approaches during the module.

Methods

This study used a qualitative descriptive design.12,13 Ethics approval was gained from The University of Sydney Research Ethics Committee (ref: 2013/212). One author was an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander person at professorial level, and the other two authors were non-Aboriginal occupational therapy academics with clinical experience in practice with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. All authors were involved in the development and presentation of the module, and the conception and implementation of the study. Invitations for students to participate were made by an academic who was not involved in the teaching of the module.

Undergraduate (n = 55) and Master’s entry (n = 52) students who undertook the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health module in 2016 (n = 107) were invited to participate in interviews. In-depth, semi-structured, face-to-face interviews were conducted. A broad interview guide was developed consisting of open-ended questions to focus on the student experience (Supplementary material file S2). Interviews were conducted by LM and were digitally recorded with permission and then transcribed and de-identified prior to analysis. Interviews lasted between 10 min and 30 min. Topics explored included student understandings of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health and culture, feelings about undertaking the module (individual and group components), and how the module contributed to learning, preparation for placement experiences and future practice.

The interview transcripts were analysed thematically.14 Each transcript was analysed by assigning codes on a line-by-line basis, grouping codes into categories and developing overall themes. Field notes were taken by LM before and after each interview to reflect on any feelings and thoughts or emerging themes in relation to the interviews. JGil contributed an Aboriginal voice to the findings and compared the findings to those of other professional groups across the University of Sydney. Data saturation was reflected in repeated reference to similar issues from the dataset. Pseudonyms were used to preserve anonymity, and direct quotes illustrated the relevant themes.

Participant consent

The research was undertaken with appropriate written informed consent of participants.

Results

A total of 18 students (n = 3 undergraduate and n = 15 Master’s) aged 21–42 years were interviewed (response rate, 16.8%). None identified as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander persons, two were international students and two were male. Three themes were identified: (1) student contexts of approaching the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander module, (2) experiencing the module with other students, and (3) student learning gains following the module. These themes and supporting quotes are summarised in Table 1.

Table 1.Quotes to support study themes.

ThemeExample quotes
Theme 1: student contexts of approaching the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander module
 Little previous contact‘I guess I just come from a situation that has been mainly urbanised and very westernised and I haven’t really left capital cities at all and really not ventured into even other areas of Sydney.’ (Participant E)
 Impact of lack of confidence‘I anticipate all of the things that might go wrong and then nine times out of ten they do go wrong because you get nervous…’ (Participant S)
 Lack of preparation from school‘I was quite ignorant coming into it [the module]…I don’t think we covered Indigenous history or anything since seventh grade ….’ (Participant E)
‘What did I learn in high school? It was such a watered-down topic [at school] and then you get here…I logged on and was like oh my God I feel like I’ve been missing so much.’ (Participant E)
 Impact of pre-module knowledge‘It’s quite frightening because even in the survey …when you asked us if we could identify significant Aboriginal people…I just couldn’t believe how much I didn’t know.’ (Participant H)
Theme 2: experiencing the module with others
 Helpful aspects of the module.‘My group were very active co-contributors, and I think we were able to dig really deep into what are some of the issues and how best to approach them……’ (Participant E)
 Observation of racism in the community generally‘I’ve also realised people are casually racist and people are okay with being like that…sometimes they don’t see an issue…and I’ve seen it everywhere.’ (Participant E)
 Offensive and racist comments from other students‘…some of the attitudes of classmates….I was taken aback when one of them went – ‘I’m a quarter [ethnic group] and I don’t go telling people that I’m [the ethnic group]’. I felt ‘oh shut up!’ ‘ (Participant C)
 Offensive comments from other students in online discussions‘…even on our online forum …you see the way that people refer to an Aboriginal person…that is so offensive.’ (Participant E)
Theme 3: student learning gains following the module
 Improved self-awareness‘It [the module] opened my eyes to how much I didn’t know and [how] what you think is based on stereotypes.’ (Participant E)
 An appreciation of the complexity of cultural competence‘You think that you would be culturally competent – it’s quite complex and there are a lot of different aspects that make you culturally competent.’ (Participant C)
 Benefits of the kinship workshop‘…learning more about kinship and how the community works was huge for me because I didn’t have an understanding of that at all until then.’ (Participant F)
 Emotional effects of the module

‘[the module] kept me awake a couple of times.’ (Participant F)

‘It’s distressing…it’s heartbreaking. It’s something you just have to know about’ (Participant L)

 Growing understanding of occupational therapy‘I think it really helped me re-frame occupational therapy…it has made me a better practitioner than I would have been otherwise.’ (Participant E)

Theme 1: student contexts of approaching the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander module

The sub-themes from the data for this theme were around little previous contact with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, the impact on students of a lack of confidence, the lack of preparation from school curricula and the impact of their pre-module knowledge.

There was a range of previous exposure and learning about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture in the student group, which was unrelated to student experience. Some students (n = 3) had lived close to, or worked with, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities in more remote and regional areas of Australia (West Kimberley, Broome, Northern Territory, Yamba). Two students talked about growing up with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and playing together or attending the same school, and two students mentioned contact they had as part of travelling around Australia. Others (n = 4) had volunteered for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander organisations or had an occupational therapy professional placement involving Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander clients. Students acknowledged that this did not necessarily prepare them for understanding the full diversity of all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

However, most students indicated that they had very little previous contact with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Understandably, the students with experience of living and working with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples expressed more confidence about undertaking the module. One student suggested this was because they had previous mentors and were able to learn from their mistakes. Others with less experience indicated lower confidence and were more tentative about working with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, because they felt they were ‘stepping on people’s toes’ (Participant H). In relation to professional practice, one student described the impact of their lack of confidence.

Two students suggested that attending school in Australia had not prepared them to understand Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture. Another student reflected on the impact of the pre-module survey activity that caused them to reflect on their level of understanding.

Theme 2: experiencing the module with others

The sub-themes from the data for this theme were focused on helpful aspects of the module working in groups, observation of racism in the community generally, offensive and racist comments from other students and offensive comments from other students in online discussions.

The module activities included a mix of individual tasks, groupwork around case studies and workshops, which most students indicated that they found helpful. Having undertaken the module, students had an increased awareness of racism in relation to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in Australia. This included observing racism in the community more generally. However, students also observed racism during the module from fellow students, such as one student who was upset when they heard another student claiming that their personal ethnic heritage (self-defined as quarter-caste) was equivalent to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander identification and descent using bloodline terms. Another student observed disrespectful and racist comments being made in online discussions.

Theme 3: student learning gains following the module

The sub-themes from the data for this theme were improved self-awareness, an appreciation of the complexity of cultural competence, benefits of the kinship workshop, emotional effects of the module and a growing understanding of occupational therapy.

Most students described how they were more self-aware about their attitudes towards Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, and how the module had given them ‘more of an open mind’ (Participant K). The module also contributed to students’ assessment of their cultural competency when working with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, and an appreciation for how complex this process was. Students also identified changes for them in approaching Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, and students especially appreciated the experience from the kinship workshop. Students described experiencing some deep personal reactions to the module content as they came to understand the issues more clearly. Many students expressed their distress when they discovered that some of the issues presented in the module were happening in Australia, and they were previously unaware of them.

Students aligned their learning from the module with their growing understanding of occupational therapy practice. Students expressed their insight that the module had only got them started on their journey of being able to work with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, and that becoming fully culturally competent was an ongoing process, for instance: ‘I think I’m ready to start learning’ (Participant F).

Discussion

This study sought to explore the perceptions and experiences of occupational therapy students at the University of Sydney about their learning experiences during a module on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health and culture. Findings reflected how one group of occupational therapy students grew in their knowledge and understanding of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health and culture from a position of relative ignorance, and how the module contributed to improving confidence and self-awareness. We could not compare our findings with other occupational therapy programs because there are few published examples of Australian university-based learning activities about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health and culture. One international review of health professional students undertaking Indigenous curricula included nine Australian studies, but none included occupational therapy students.11 This module does, however, align with an educational program developed by Dentistry at the University of Sydney.15

For many participants the module was their first exposure to the injustices experienced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, and many had very little contact with any Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. However, contact with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples does not always translate to understanding and positive attitudes by non-Aboriginal people.9 Few students had professional placements that included Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, therefore students were unable to learn in the context of occupational therapy service provision. Other studies have also found limited knowledge about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health issues prior to undertaking an education activity,16,17 and students suggested that their main source of prior knowledge came from the media or prior schooling,18 which may be a barrier to student learning.

A single educational module focused on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health and culture is unlikely to result in substantial outcomes for non-Aboriginal students. For instance, the degree of immersion and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander ways of learning (such as story sharing, narrative-driven learning, land-based learning and connection to community)19 in the module were limited by program requirements, resources and time. It has been suggested that educational programs might lead to short-term improvements to professional practice, but few have demonstrated long-term change.20 Curricula need to be responsive and focused on supporting students on their continuing journey in their evolving understanding over time. Given that the proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander occupational therapists and occupational therapy students remains low, there is a lack of opportunity for ongoing meaningful exchanges of understanding through informal networks and professional modelling.

The Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency has published occupational therapy competency standards4 that recognise the unique cultural needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, and the need for occupational therapists to support their self-determination and quality of life. This is necessary to ensure that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples will access occupational therapy services where they can be assured that communication will be respectful and therapists are aware of cultural issues. Specific competencies are in the following areas: (1) professionalism (that occupational therapists practise in a culturally responsive and culturally safe manner, and respond to historical, political, cultural, societal, environmental and economic factors influencing health, wellbeing and occupations of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples); (2) knowledge and learning (that occupational therapists understand and respond to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health philosophies, leadership, research and practices); (3) occupational therapy process and practice (that occupational therapists seek to understand and incorporate Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ experiences of health, wellbeing and occupations encompassing cultural connections); and (4) communication (that occupational therapists work ethically with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and organisations to understand and incorporate relevant cultural protocols and communication strategies). The study findings identified improved self-awareness and confidence, an appreciation of cultural practices and the capacity to recognise racism, which go some way to help students to meet these competencies prior to their graduation. Study participants identified elements of racism in the student cohort and within the community. Given that occupational therapy students are recruited from the general Australian population,21,22 they may reflect the 75% of Australian society that has a bias against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.23 Cultural insensitivity refers to more subtle forms of racism, also known as unconscious or implicit bias.24 This can lead to unconscious prejudice and stereotypes that can negatively affect the health of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Findings indicated that students reflected on their own cultural values during the module, such as realising their positions of privilege, which were previously not acknowledged,25 and how this might influence their professional relationships with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander clients. These issues need to be discussed in a way that does not cause harm and assists students to move forward in a positive way. Self-reflection is the basis of cultural humility26 and culturally safe practice, and enables a more client-centred approach and therefore better client rapport.27 A process of learning about historical trauma, power, privilege and systemic inequality with the goal of students questioning their pre-existing views has been referred to as a ‘pedagogy of discomfort’.23 For some study participants, exposure to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ issues was a distressing experience, which is consistent with other studies17,28 and is the opportunity to critically reflect and learn. This finding underlines the need to ensure a safe learning environment balanced with the need to address potentially confronting material. Negative experiences were described by study participants, however these were often related to other students in the group expressing offensive opinions. It appears that students with negative attitudes did not volunteer to participate in the interviews, therefore these could not be explored directly.

Confidence was an issue for students who had little experience of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. Qualified health professionals in clinical practice also report a lack of confidence, citing feelings of frustration, a lack of training, being overwhelmed and having a sense of not knowing what they do not know.29 Professional organisations, universities and employers need to provide opportunities for health professionals to develop their professional capacity and confidence. In the time since this study was conducted the University of Sydney has incorporated more Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander curriculum content in both the undergraduate and Master’s programs. The Occupational Therapy staff have recently completed a 16 month cultural responsiveness mentoring program with Indigenous Allied Health Australia. This program aimed to support academic staff in their cultural responsiveness journey, strengthen their capacity to grow curriculum content on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people’s wellbeing, and challenge the way in which occupational therapy services are delivered.

The module that was the subject of this study was developed and presented by non-Aboriginal and Aboriginal academics and expert contributors, and aligns with other recent studies. One study has described discipline-specific learning modules that aligned with the module for this study, which were presented to nursing, occupational therapy and dietetics students.30 Student outcomes aligned with the findings of our study, in that students valued learning experiences and could explore their previous knowledge and enrich their understanding of Aboriginal history and culture. An international scoping review of multidisciplinary Indigenous cultural safety training31 found that in line with our study, workshops, discussions and immersion experiences were used, and most programs lasted 1–5 days. As in our study, student outcomes were evaluated by interviews in around 20% of articles, however, unlike our study only 20% of studies included a named Indigenous author.31 There remains little published evidence of education programs with regard to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ health for occupational therapy students. This is also the case for physiotherapy students, and a unique program has been devised32 using a visit to the Melbourne Museum’s Bunjilaka gallery as an immersive experience, alongside similar classroom activities on cultural safety, health literacy, self-awareness of students’ own culture and health beliefs, and strategies for effective communication, as in our study.

Study limitations

The study was limited by having only one period of data collection after the module was completed. Follow-up interviews would have been helpful to determine whether changes were sustained or improved upon over time. A sample size of 18 was effective for a qualitative study33 and data saturation was achieved.34 However, the sample may have been influenced by volunteer bias and social desirability bias given that there were no negative opinions expressed. It should be noted that the majority of interviewees were Master’s students, therefore, perspectives may have been different if more undergraduates had participated. Any perceived power differential between the students and the authors in the conduct of the study was acknowledged and managed in the ethics process by a clear explanation in the participant information statement. Due to funding constraints the interviews were conducted by one of the authors (LM) rather than an independent person, which may have impacted on students’ response to the invitation and their answers.

Conclusion

The students who were interviewed had developed in their self-awareness and understanding of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ issues of relevance to occupational therapy. Further work needs to be done to evaluate educational activities with occupational therapy and health professional students across Australia, and the health professions in general.

Supplementary material

Supplementary material is available online.

Data availability

The data that support this study cannot be publicly shared due to ethical or privacy reasons and may be shared upon reasonable request to the corresponding author if appropriate.

Conflicts of interest

The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Declaration of funding

This research did not receive any specific funding.

Author contributions

All authors made substantial contributions to the design of the study, data collection and analysis. All authors reviewed the drafts of the manuscript and approved it for publication.

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