Nursing care for people living with diabetes and associated conditions in Fiji : an iTaukei community context : a thesis presented in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand

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Date
2021
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Massey University
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This research examined the experiences of iTaukei (indigenous people of Fiji) patients and nurses in the context of the diabetes epidemic in Fiji. Vanua theory, which has some influence on iTaukei health beliefs and practices through its physical, social and cultural elements informed the design and conduct of the research. Despite the voluminous global literature on diabetes and non-communicable diseases (NCD), there was little written about the topic for Fiji and the Pacific. Fiji was among the first few countries to adopt public health initiatives that were developed to curb the incidence of NCD. However, such initiatives have faced a perpetual challenge in terms of implementation, monitoring and evaluation. The research used the Fijian Vanua Research Framework and veitalanoa, a data collection method, to gather information from twelve patients and eleven nurses from four medical areas in Fiji. The veitalanoa groups were complemented by four veitalanoa individual sessions and field observations. Findings revealed that patients struggled to cope with diabetes and associated complications while nurses were challenged to deliver best practice in inadequate nursing practice environments. Specifically, patients had difficulties both living with diabetes and accessing planned care and were culturally unlikely to question or challenge medical decisions, simply expecting safe and trustful care. Nurses were not able to nurse in the way they know is needed; they provided rudimentary and sometimes inappropriate care, and experienced extreme frustration while attempting to provide holistic care in a highly medicalised model of care. The nurses were aware of vanua etiquette and their connections with iTaukei patients, however, they could not apply such protocol. Despite study findings revealing significant challenges for patients and nurses, the participants suggested a way forward for the improvement of nursing care and primary health care in Fiji. Such changes may represent considerable challenge to the accepted hierarchies of power and decision making and will need to be strongly supported by a focus on patient centered care. 
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Diabetes, Treatment, Diabetics, Care, Primary health care, Fiji
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