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Exploring the Experiences of Urban First Nations People Living with or Caring for Someone with Type 2 Diabetes
The Frog Pond Site (AhGx-359): The Identification of a 17th-Century Neutral Iroquoian Medicine Lodge in Southern Ontario
Gwayakwaajimowin: Truth Telling: Police Responses to Sexual Violence in Urban Indigenous Communities
The Identification of Lead Ammunition as a Source of Lead Exposure in First Nations: The Use of Lead Isotope Ratios
Inuit Artists and Tuberculosis Patients in Hamilton
[Inuit Go South for Tuberculosis Treatment]
"The Lone Streetwalker": Missing Women and Sex Work-Related News in Mainstream Canadian Media
New Aboriginal Health Course Increases Awareness
On Collectors and Collecting: Selections From the Herb and CeCe Schreiber Family Collection
Our Health Counts: Access to Health Risk Factors and Its Relationship to Diabetes in an Urban First Nations Population
Health Sciences Thesis (MSc) -- York University, 2015.
Our Health Counts Urban Aboriginal Health Database Research Project: Community Report: First Nations Adults and Children, City of Hamilton
Conrad Prince
Sara Mayo
A Report on the Water Ceremony & Candlelight Vigil for the Missing Murdered Indigenous Women at Honouring the Circle, Hamilton, Ontario
Using a Honouring the Circle event to discuss using an Indigenous culturally specific approach to provide empowerment for its participants. To view article scroll down to page 101.
Report: Revisioning Coordinated Access: Fostering Indigenous Best Practices Towards a Wholistic Systems Approach to Homelessness
Focus is on Hamilton, Ontario, but does contain information gathered from service providers nationally.
A Selective Literature Review on Managed Alcohol Programs and Indigenous Healing Methodologies
Strengthening Health Literacy among Indigenous People Living with Cardiovascular Disease, their Families and Health Care Providers: Phase 1 Report
Study conducted in-depth semi-structured interviews with 25 client and 6 staff participants. Ten themes emerged: culture and identity, traditional health beliefs, family, health messaging from others, healthcare experience, access to quality care, patient engagement, self-care, communication with health care practitioners, personal agency and responsibility, and client management of medications.
Urban Indigenous Strategy Survey: Results Summary
Sample of 513 respondents either fully or partially filled out the survey. Both Indigenous and non-Indigenous residents were asked for comments and suggestions for activities to improve city's response to Indigenous citizens under the themes of land, people, and spirit.