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Aboriginal People and Imperialism in the Western Hemisphere
Among Native American Teenagers, Sex Without Contraceptives is Common
The Biological Encounter: Disease and the Ideological Domain
Cancer Incidence, Survival, and Mortality Among American Indians and Alaska Natives
Cancer Prevention and Control in American Indians/Alaska Natives
Cancer Profiles of Two American Indian Tribes
Cherokee Healing: Myth, Dreams, and Medicine
Co-Morbid Symptoms of Depression and Conduct Disorder in First Nations Children: Some Findings From the Flower of Two Soils Project
Community Collaboration in the Face of the COVID-19 Pandemic: Examples of How Remote First Nations in Northern Ontario Managed the Pandemic
Examines the community-based strategy to reduce the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic by Indigenous communities.
Comparing Health Status: Native Peoples of Canada, Aborigines of Australia, and Maoris of New Zealand
Contemplating Place in Nursing: Ontological Understandings
A collaborative multicultural look at the connection between place and healing for Canadian nurses.
The Continuing Importance of Country Food to Northern Natives
Data Sources for Cancer Statistics Among American Indians/Alaska Natives
Establishing Core Content for Culturally Grounded Harm Reduction Intervention for Urban Indigenous After-School Youth in the Pacific Northwest
Using interviews to identify risk factors for urban Indigenous youth to help implement a more culturally relevant harm prevention programing.
Evaluating the Impact of a Holistic, Community-Driven, Physical Activity-Based Wellness Program for Indigenous Women using Nominal Group Technique
Examines what a new culturally relevant wellness program for Indigenous women does for its participants and what it adds to existing knowledge on health interventions.
First National Conference on Cancer in Native Americans: Welcoming Remarks
The Forgotten People: The Relocation and Internment of Aleuts During World War II
Gallstones and Gallbladder Cancer in Southwestern Native Americans
Indigenous Elders' Conceptualization of Wellbeing: An Anishinaabe Worldview Perspective
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.
Indigenous Mortality: Placing Australian Aboriginal Mortality Within a Broader Context
Introduction: Proceedings of the First National Conference on Cancer in Native Americans
It’s More than Just Physical: Experiences of Pain and Pain Management among Māori with Cancer And Their Whānau
Examines the use of more culturally responsive pain management for Māori cancer patients.
Keep the Circle Strong: Native Health Promotion
Louis Riel and the Insanity Plea that Never Came
Lynch Syndrome II in a Navajo Family: A Revisit
Microbes and Muskets: Smallpox and the Participation of the Amerindian Allies of New France in the Seven Years' War
Perspectives of Nutrition and Physical Activity among Families of an Indigenous Birth Cohort: A Qualitative Analysis Exploring the Barriers to and Facilitators of Healthy Active Living
Discusses the barriers to healthy active living for Indigenous mothers from the Six Nations of the Grand River.
Prairie Indians and the 1918 Influenza epidemic
Preparing Aboriginal Students for Medical School: Manitoba Program Increases Equality of Opportunity
Social Media Use among American Indian and Alaska Native People: Implications for Health Communication Strategies
Identifies the use of social media among Indigenous populations and whether this social media use can it be tailored to spread health education to hard to reach communities.
Telling Dreams and Keeping Secrets: The Bole Maru as American Indian Religious Resistance
Toward a Reconsideration of Disease and Contact in the Americas
Two Perspectives on Aboriginal Female Suicides in Custody
Weaving Promising Practices to Transform Indigenous Population Health and Wellness Reporting by Indigenizing Indicators in First Nations Health
Reports on health statistics for Indigenous populations and the need for the collection of statistics that acknowledge Indigenous worldviews and practices.