Calls to Action: Truth, Reconciliation, and Indigenous Rights for Supportive Decision-Making in Healthcare
Examines what is needed to improve equitable health care for Indigenous populations in urban settings.
Examines what is needed to improve equitable health care for Indigenous populations in urban settings.
Examines the impact of education and identity in predicting the socioeconomic mobility of Indigenous populations.
Discusses ways to both address colonization and create a culturally relevant means to improve Indigenous health.
Examines the use of treaty-based strategies to address the inequalities faced by Indigenous communities during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Examines the role of Métis filmmakers in the creation of a Métis Storywork methodology.
Examines the First Nations Community Education Program as a collaborative effort to address Indigenous health inequalities in Canada.
Looks at the results of a 90-day dietary challenge, consisting of pre-contact food, by members of the Six Nations of the Grand River.
Looks at the underlining causes of and recommendations to address the forced or coerced sterilization of Indigenous women in Canada.
Looks at the role of the Canadian media in reconciliation by well-informing the general public of the countries colonial impact on its Indigenous populations.
Using personal experiences to address colonialism and the systematic racism within the Canadian health care system.
Looks at the lack of education provided for Indigenous people living HIV and how that limits their access to proper supports and testing.
Using interviews with first-language speaking Elders to improve the understanding of Indigenous worldviews on health and well-being in order to improve health programs within Indigenous communities.
Examines a doula training course that teaches palliative care specifically for Indigenous seniors.
Examines the results of 11 studies on health care institutions that used culturally appropriate interventions when dealing with Indigenous patients.
Examines maternal and child health from an Indigenous perspectives.
An investigation into whether framing water as a human right could increase support to provide cleaner water for the Indigenous communities.
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.
A personal reflection on the author balancing their Métis ancestry and their academic career.
A personal reflection by a Métis elder on traditional Michif food.
Examines the levels of inclusion and exclusion of Indigenous voices in regards to energy issues in Canada.
Discusses the barriers to healthy active living for Indigenous mothers from the Six Nations of the Grand River.
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.
Examines personal reflections of two 2SLGBTQ+ Métis people and their roles towards decolonization.
A personal reflection on providing a Métis perspective to land acknowledgments.
Looks at the research on Métis spirituality and how it relates to their nationhood.
Examines the ideas of rest and art being used to combat the effects of colonization.
Restoring Our Roots is research project that creates an inclusive sense of community using traditional land-based teachings to improve mental health by encourage Indigenous youth to reconnect with their own culture.
An overview of the research on Indigenous children's overrepresentation within the welfare system.
Looks at a project that interweaves Indigenous and Western point-of-views to improve emergency care for northern communities.
Examines an anti-racism educational program to address racism in Canada.
Examines the use of Métis women-specific methodology to improve research within Métis communities.
An examination of the story and the discourse on the Battle of Seven Oaks using an examining of the primary sources of the time.
Discusses the need for Métis centered approached to feminism to create a new form of knowledge.
Looks at the impact of decolonization within the mental health community amongst Canadian Indigenous populations.
Examines the role of ethnobotany in decolonization.
Examines the experiences of 13 Métis women and the passing down of their knowledge for future generations.
Reports on health statistics for Indigenous populations and the need for the collection of statistics that acknowledge Indigenous worldviews and practices.