Exploring the Characteristics for a Culturally Sensitive Employee Assistance Program with a First Nation Child and Family Staff Through the Use of Qualitative Interviewing
Exploring the Past, Present and Future of Traditional Native Healing in Southwestern and South-Central Ontario
Exploring Well-Being in a First Nation Community: A Qualitative Study
First Nations Led Telemedicine: From Access to Effective Use
"Flip It Around! To Being a Good Reminder on How You’re Supposed to Live": Understanding the Role of Storytelling as a Means of Encouraging Compassionate Listening in Type 2 Diabetes Healthcare Settings
Forbidden Access? Exploring The Nature Of And Access To Culturally Pertinent Psychotherapy For Indigenous Latino Border-Gender Youth Living In Toronto
From Benzos to Berries: Treatment Offered at an Aboriginal Youth Solvent Abuse Treatment Centre Relays the Importance of Culture
From the Community to the Classroom: The Aboriginal Health Curriculum at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine
From the Inside Out: Spirituality as the Heart of Aboriginal Helping in [Spite of ?] Western Systems
Gitxsan Phrase Book for Health Care Providers Volume II
A Guide for Working with Aboriginal People of Northwestern Ontario: A Stroke Resource for Healthcare Providers
Guiding Health Promotion Efforts with Urban Inuit: A Community-Specific Perspective on Health Information Sources and Dissemination Strategies
Hand Drumming: Health-Promoting Experiences of Aboriginal Women from a Northern Ontario Urban Community
Healing From Complex Trauma and Abuse: An Exploration of Integrated Western and Traditional Indigenous Mental Health Services at Anishnawbe Health Toronto
Healing in Ojibwa First Nation Communities: Investigating the Relationship Among Acculturation, Health and Identity
Healing Trail Promotes Diabetes Awareness
Focuses on programs and developing strategies launched through the Healing Trail program to promote diabetes awareness within Aboriginal communities.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.21.
“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.
['I Honoured Him Until the End': Storytelling of Indigenous Female Caregivers and Care Providers Focused on Alzheimer's Disease and Other Dementias (ADOD)]
“I would prefer to have my healthcare provided over a cup of tea any day”: Recommendations by Urban Métis Women to Improve Access to Health and Social Services in Toronto for the Métis Community
“In a good way”: Going beyond Patient Navigation to Ensure Culturally Relevant Care in the Cancer System for First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Patients in Ontario
Indigenizing Research Practices: Two Indigenous Researchers Share Their Experiences of Incorporating Indigenous Culture into Research.
An Indigenous Epistemological Approach to Promote Health Through Effective Knowledge Translation
Indigenous Health Research and the Non-Indigenous Researcher: A Proposed Framework for the Autoethnographic Methodological Approach
Indigenous Health Research Development Program
Indigenous Knowledge, Social Relationships and Health: Community-Based Participatory Research with Anishinabe Youth at Pic River First Nation
Inequities in Diabetes Outcomes among Urban First Nation and Métis Communities: Can Addressing Diversities in Preventive Services Make a Difference?
Innovations on a Shoestring: A Study of Collaborative Community-Based Aboriginal Mental Health Service Model in Rural Canada
Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) and the Social Determinants of Aboriginal Peoples’ Health: A Case Study of First Nations Women’s Resilience, Resistance, and Renewal
“It’s a lot of work, and I’m still doing it”: Indigenous Perceptions of Help after Sexual Abuse and Sexual Violence
The Journal of the Canadian Rheumatology Association (Spring 2013, Volume 23, Number 1)
The Journey of One
Kijiikwewin aji: Sweetgrass Stories with Traditional Indigenous Women in Northern Ontario
Knowledge Transfer/Translation Project Summary Report
The Landscape of Midwifery Care for Aboriginal Communities in Canada: A Discussion Paper to Support Culturally Safe Midwifery Services for Aboriginal Families
Living with Tuberculosis: The Experiences and Perceptions of First Nations People in the Sioux Lookout Zone
Making History Heal: Settler-Colonialism and Urban Indigenous Healing in Ontario, 1970s-2010
The Meaning of Anishinabe Healing and Wellbeing on Manitoulin Island
The Meaning of the Client Experience at a Health Centre Within a First Nations Community in Southern Ontario
Milo Pimatisiwin Project: Healthy Living for Mushkegowuk Youth
Mind, Body, Spirit: Promising Practices in First Nations and Inuit Home and Community Care
Mothers' Perceptions of Childhood Immunizations in First Nations Communities of the Sioux Lookout Zone
Moving Population and Public Health Knowledge into Action: A Casebook of Knowledge Translation Stories
Naturopathic Medicine and Aboriginal Health: An Exploratory Study at Anishnawbe Health Toronto
Naturopathic Medicine for Improved Health Care within Canadian Aboriginal Communities
Discusses results of four investigations: systematic review of literature on use of naturopathic or complementary medicine; qualitative study on impact and conduct of naturopathic medicine at an Aboriginal community clinic; telephone survey of Aboriginal Health Centres across Ontario; and comparative assessment of approaches used in naturopathic and traditional Aboriginal medicine.
Ne-Iikaanigaana Toolkit 'All Our Relations': Guidance For Creating Safer Environments For Indigenous Peoples
Discusses strategies health care organizations can employ in areas of community, education, relationships, Indigenous partnership, wholistic continuum of care, self-determination and culture in order to create a inclusive environment for Indigenous patients.
New Aboriginal Health Course Increases Awareness
New School to Train Aboriginal Doctors
Explains how the Northern Ontario Medical School will be a viable option for Aboriginal student by allowing them to complete their medical education close to home.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.50.
Niiwin Wendaanimak Four Winds Wellness Program Evaluation Report
Program designed for homeless and under-housed Indigenous peoples living in the downtown mid-west Toronto area. Evaluation consisted of environmental scan, developing a client profile, key informant interviews and focus groups.