Aboriginal Health & Cultural Diversity Online Glossary
Acknowledging and Promoting Indigenous Knowledges, Paradigms, and Practices within Health Literacy-Related Policy and Practice Documents across Australia, Canada, and New Zealand
Adapting Our Interventions to Native Reality
All Our Voices: Final Report
Animkee
Being a Native Researcher in Your Own Community
Beyond a Dreamcatcher: Improving Services for Indigenous Justice-Involved Youth with Substance Use Challenges: A Youth-Led Study
Building on Strengths in Naujaat: The Process of Engaging Inuit Youth in Suicide Prevention
Building on the Definition of Social and Emotional Wellbeing: An Indigenous (Australian, Canadian, and New Zealand) Viewpoint
Caring Across the Boundaries: Promoting Access to Voluntary Sector Resources for First Nations Children and Families
Closing the Gaps in Aboriginal Health
Colonial Legacies and Collaborative Action: Improving Indigenous Peoples’ Health Care in Canada
Colonial Trauma: Complex, Continuous, Collective, Cumulative and Compounding Effects on the Health of Indigenous Peoples in Canada and Beyond
Community Governance of the Kahnawake Schools Diabetes Prevention Project, Kahnawake Territory, Mohawk Nation, Canada
Community Setting as a Determinant of Health for Indigenous Peoples Living in the Prairie Provinces of Canada: High Rates and Advanced Presentations of Tuberculosis
Considerations in Working with Persons of First Nations Heritage
Focuses on self-examination by psychologists, and some central and pivotal issues practitioners should be aware of.
A Conversation: Communities and Cathedrals
Cultural Humility and Elder Story-Telling: A Locally Developed, Best Practice Informed Intervention
Looks at the development of a cultural humility with Indigenous peoples, requiring self-reflection and a changing of attitudes and behaviours.
Cultural Safety and Humility Case Study Report
Cultural Safety Training for Health Professionals Working with Indigenous Populations in Montreal, Quebec
Decades of Doing: Indigenous Women Academics Reflect on the Practices of Community-Based Health Research
Decolonizing Diabetes
Researchers use a decolonizing approach in this study; interviewed 22 people from a First Nations community in Northern Ontario to explore the lived experience and perceptions about developing the disease. Findings indicate a need for culturally appropriate care.
Delivering Equitable Care: Comparing Preventive Services in Manitoba
A Dene First Nation’s Community Readiness Assessment to Take Action against HIV/AIDS: A Pilot Project
Developing a Cultural Safety Intervention for Clinicians: Process Evaluation of a Pilot Study in the Northwest Territories
Developing a More Culturally Appropriate Approach to Surveying Adverse Childhood Experiences among Indigenous Peoples in Canada
Developing a Policy to Address Anti-Indigenous Racism in Health Care
Disability...It's Not In Me...It's Out There. A Comparative Ehtnography of Environmental Factors Influencing Participation in Three Baffin Island Communities
Early Years Indigenous Cultural Safety Resource Guide
Editorial
Evaluation of the Indigenous Relationship and Cultural Safety Courses among a sample of Indigenous Services Canada nurses
Exploring Childhood Immunization Uptake With First Nations Mothers in North-Western Ontario
Exploring the Health and Well-Being of Children and Youth in Winneway, Québec
First Nations Women and Health Care Services: The Sociopolitical Context of Encounters With Nurses
Genomic Research Through an Indigenous Lens: Understanding the Expectations
Gitxsan Phrase Book for Health Care Providers Volume II
Happenings: Maternal-Child Health Care in Aboriginal Communities
Healing the Body and the Soul through Visualization: A Technique used by the Community Healing Team of Cape Dorset, Nunavut
Health & Indigenous Elders
Brief list of resources.
"Last reviewed December 2019."
Honouring Sacred Relationships: Wise Practices in Indigenous Social Work
“I feel safe just coming here because there are other Native brothers and sisters”: Findings from a Community-based Evaluation of the Niiwin Wendaanimak Four Winds Wellness Program
Study evaluates community services available to homeless and at risk Indigenous people in Toronto. Found that the collaborative services model currently in place used inclusive and harm reduction models to create a non-judgmental space; identified program strengths, challenges, and gaps and makes policy recommendations.