It’s a Journey Not a Check Box: Indigenous Cultural Safety From Training to Transformation
Discusses educational and training approaches being employed to address racism experienced by Indigenous people seeking health care.
Discusses educational and training approaches being employed to address racism experienced by Indigenous people seeking health care.
Looks at examples of community-led and community-based and state-sponsored community-run broadcasting systems from around the world.
An overview of 14 studies analyzing anxiety, depression and attempted suicide amongst the Indigenous Canadian populations and the use of culture as a treatment method.
Examines the use of Abinodjic as a wholistic approach to childcare that aligns with Indigenous cultural practices.
Examines the levels of inclusion and exclusion of Indigenous voices in regards to energy issues in Canada.
Examines the Rocky Mountain Tribal Leaders Council's (RMTLC) Public Health Workforce Expansion in Indian Country (PHWEIC) project to address the need for health care workers in Indigenous communities.
An analysis of two Yupik traditional stories and what they teach about Indigenous beliefs and connections to both tame and wild animals.
Highlights of a the digitization project to preserve the genealogical history of the Novoe Chaplino settlement.
Looks at the traditional Chukchi personal songs and its use in ceremonies and rituals.
Using an community-based approach by using over 183 interviews to discuss Indigenous health.
Addresses the reluctance of Nuu-chah-nulth elders to seek health care through a two day workshop between the Nuu-chah-nulth people and BC health care providers to brainstorm recommendations to improve emergency care.
Examines workshops create by Indigenous elders and academic researchers to improve cultural safe research practices amongst Indigenous populations.
Examines Indigenous communities health interventions in the post-pandemic era.
Using interviews and focus groups to analyze the DUDES Club as a means to engage both Indigenous and non-Indigenous men to address their physical, mental and spiritual health.
Examines kraevedcheskii (local history) museums and how they reflect the Indigenous population.
Discusses using a land-based teaching approach to reconnect and strengthen Indigenous youth with their cultural identities and improve their well-beings.
Looks at the creation of a traditional Coyote story as a strategy to address Polypharmacy, "when multiple medications are being taken and the benefits no longer outweigh the risks", for Indigenous patients.
Evaluates the use of more traditional holistic culturally sensitive approaches to address harm reduction for Indigenous people and communities.