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Annette J. Browne
Researcher at University of British Columbia
Publications - 124
Citations - 6460
Annette J. Browne is an academic researcher from University of British Columbia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Health equity. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 114 publications receiving 5545 citations. Previous affiliations of Annette J. Browne include Canadian Institutes of Health Research & University of Rhode Island.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Othering and being othered in the context of health care services.
Joy L. Johnson,Joan L. Bottorff,Annette J. Browne,Sukhdev Grewal,B. Ann Hilton,Heather Clarke +5 more
TL;DR: To foster safe and effective health care interactions, those in power must continue to unmask othering practices and transform health care environments to support truly equitable health care.
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First Nations Women’s Encounters with Mainstream Health Care Services:
Annette J. Browne,Jo-Anne Fiske +1 more
TL;DR: Examination of mainstream health care encounters from the viewpoint of First Nations women from a reserve community in northwestern Canada revealed that women’s encounters were shaped by racism, discrimination, and structural inequities that continue to marginalize and disadvantage First Nation women.
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Riting" cultural safety within the postcolonial and postnational feminist project: toward new epistemologies of healing.
Joan M. Anderson,JoAnn Perry,Connie Blue,Annette J. Browne,Angela Henderson,Koushambhi Basu Khan,Sheryl Reimer Kirkham,Judith Lynam,Pat Semeniuk,Vicki Smye +9 more
TL;DR: This article explicates the theoretical and methodological issues that came to the forefront in attempts to use this concept in research with different populations in Canada, and discusses how the concept might be rewritten within a critical postcolonial and postnational feminist discourse.
Journal Article
The Relevance of Postcolonial Theoretical Perspectives to Research in Aboriginal Health
TL;DR: Although postcolonial theories are relatively new in nursing discourses, they provide a powerful analytical framework for considering the legacy of the colonial past and the neocolonial present as the context in which health care is delivered.
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Closing the health equity gap: evidence-based strategies for primary health care organizations
Annette J. Browne,Colleen Varcoe,Sabrina T. Wong,Victoria Smye,Josée G. Lavoie,Doreen Littlejohn,David Tu,Olive Godwin,Murry Krause,Koushambhi Basu Khan,Alycia Fridkin,Patricia Rodney,John O’Neil,Scott Lennox +13 more
TL;DR: Four key dimensions of equity-orientedPHC services are identified as 10 strategies that intersect to optimize the effectiveness of PHC services, particularly through improvements in the quality of care, an improved 'fit' between people's needs and services, enhanced trust and engagement by patients, and a shift from crisis-oriented care to continuity of care.