Adaptations to the Serious Illness Conversation Guide to Be More Culturally Safe
Using sharing circles to identify ways to make the tools used in palliative care to be more culturally relevant for Indigenous patients.
Using sharing circles to identify ways to make the tools used in palliative care to be more culturally relevant for Indigenous patients.
Examines the IT'S TIME toolkit as a means to provide collaborative culturally relevant treatment for tobacco addiction within Inuit communities.
Using the investigation into high preterm births amongst the Cowichan to examine collaborative research reviews that follow the OCAP principles.
Using the 2018 Vibrio cholerae outbreak to discuss the need for stronger institutional relationships and partnerships with local Indigenous communities when dealing with the impact of climate change trends.
Looks at the use of a more borderless health care system for Indigenous communities to meet their specific needs.
Using the experience of Indigenous UBC health student's participation at the 2018 International Indigenous HealthFusion Team Challenge to discuss opportunities for Indigenous students to become health leaders and contribute to reconciliation in Canada.
Reports results of 183 interviews and focus groups held between 2015 and 2015 in eight communities with a variety of health delivery systems, geographies, accessibilities and language groups. Four themes emerged: control of healthcare, traditional medicine and healing practices, community participation, and dealing with the impacts of colonization.
Looks at the use of a more wholistic and culturally relevant approaches to Indigenous health care.
Using a scoping process to examine overlapping and unceded areas within the Treaty 9 landscape.
Looks at the Mino Kaanjigoowin (MK) program at Na-Me-Res (Native Men’s Residence) as model to provide help for the health of urban Indigenous people.
Examines the use of culture with yoga and meditation as means to help at-risk Indigenous youth.
Examines the historical origins of the Mi'kmaq's economic dependence into modern times.
Identifies ways of incorporating Gitxsan knowledge of dementia to help nurses incorporate more culturally safe practices to deal with Indigenous elderly patients in British Columbia.
Looks at how the criminalization of HIV nondisclosure has created a culturally insensitive situation that has increased isolation and disparity for Indigenous cis and transgender women living with HIV.
An introduction to the special issue on Chukotka: Understanding the Past, Contemporary Practices, and Perceptions of the Present.
Connects Indigenous health with the locations of rural and remote Indigenous communities.
Examines the use of Abinodjic as a wholistic approach to childcare that aligns with Indigenous cultural practices.
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.
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.
Discusses using a land-based teaching approach to reconnect and strengthen Indigenous youth with their cultural identities and improve their well-beings.
Examine a new method of conducting research within Indigenous communities that works in collaborations with Indigenous cultural beliefs and for the benefit of the communities themselves.