The application of kaupapa in lab-based research Research Completed

Title

The application of kaupapa in lab-based research

Lead Author

Issac Warbrick , Amohia Boulton, Stephen Stannard, Chris Cunningham

Organisation(s)

AUT, Whakauae Research for Maori Health and Development, Massey

Publication Year

2014

Publisher

MAI JOURNAL VOLUME 3, ISSUE 3, 2014

Contacts

Senior Research Fellow, Taupua Waiora Centre for Mäori Health Research, Auckland University of Technology,New Zealand. Email: isaac.warbrick@aut.ac.nz

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Abstract

Type- 2 diabetes and other illnesses associated with a sedentary lifestyle have a high prevalence among Mäori. While the application of knowledge from exercise physiology, a specific discipline of the health sciences, could be used to enhance Mäori health aspirations, Mäori- led research in this field is relatively uncommon. Exercise physiology seeks to understand physical performance and the relationships between fi tness, body composition, health and illness. Rarely have the key tenets of exercise physiology been applied to Mäori populations. This paper discusses the application of, and interface between, kaupapa Mäori methods of research and those traditionally used in exercise physiology. Specifi cally we discuss the application of four kaupapa—rangatiratanga, wairuatanga, whanaungatanga and manaakitanga—in a lab- based setting. The paper concludes that exercise science has the potential to bridge Indigenous and Western approaches to research, informing both the prevention and the treatment of lifestyle illnesses that impact significantly on Mäori communities.

 

 

Keywords:

research methodology, exercise science, Mäori health, Indigenous health services, exercise, physical

 

 

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1857

Added

November 27, 2014