Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health services are heavily dependent on overseas‐trained doctors (OTDs).
These OTDs are increasingly from countries with variable English language and educational equivalency compared with locally trained doctors.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health services create particular demands for all doctors, such as negotiating “cultural domains” and acknowledging the contribution of Aboriginal health workers.
Little is known about the roles and experience of OTDs in health service provision in Indigenous communities.
Barriers to effective research into the experience of OTDs include privacy legislation and a lack of standardised data.
Researching the narratives of OTDs in Indigenous health services offers an opportunity to explore the diversity and complexity of the cultural interfaces in health service provision.
Dementia in Australia's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population is an area of significant health and community concern. In this article, we use a hermeneutic mode of interpretation to deepen understanding of experience and meaning in dementia for family carers of older Aboriginal people in urban Australia. Specifically, we draw from the hermeneutic concept of "world disclosure" to illuminate the dementia experience in three ways: through an artwork of the brain and dementia; through concrete description of the lived relation of caregiving; and through an epochal perspective on the significance of contemporary caregiving in dementia. Using narrative and visual knowledge, this three-fold approach brings to the forefront the importance of ontological and existential meanings which resonate for Aboriginal families in the dementia caregiving experience.
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