Current Health Services, Chapter 3
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.
A Dene First Nation’s Community Readiness Assessment to Take Action against HIV/AIDS: A Pilot Project
Le Dépistage des Retards de Développement Chez les Jeunes Enfants d’une Communauté des Premières Nations
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
Developing an Indigenous Measure of Overall Health and Well-being: The Wicozani Instrument
Developing an Inuit-Specific Framework for Culturally Relevant Health Indicators Incorporating Gender-Based Analysis
Developing Tautai Lavea‘i, a Breast Cancer Patient Nativation Program in American Samoa
Developing the Tribal Resource Guide and the Poverty and Culture Training: The We RISE (Raising Income, Supporting Education) Study
Christine W. Hockett
The Development and Evaluation of a Cultural Competency Training Programme for Psychologists Working With Māori: A Training Needs Analysis
Development of a Curriculum on the Health of Aboriginal Children in Canada
The Development of Culturally Safe and Relevant Health Promotion Resources for Effective Trachoma Elimination in Remote Aboriginal Communities
Diagnosis as a Naming Ceremony: Caution Warranted in Use of the DSM-IV with Canadian Aboriginal Peoples
Diffusion of Personal Health Information: Self-Determination and Empowering Practices for Manitoba Inuit
Divergent Models of Diabetes Among American Indian Elders
Do No Harm: Decolonising Aboriginal Health Research
A Doctor Among the Oglala Sioux Tribe: The Letters of Robert H. Ruby, 1953-1954
Does a Culturally Sensitive Smoking Prevention Program Reduce Smoking Intentions Among Aboriginal Children? A Pilot Study
Don't Call Me Crazy: Re-Envisioning Mental Health Services For Aboriginal Peoples in Prince George
Don't Let Pride Get in the Way of a Diabetes Check
Looks at the diabetes epidemic among the Aboriginal population and projects geared at earlier diagnosis in Aboriginal communities.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.30.
Early Learning for Aboriginal Children: Past Present and Future and an Exploration of the Aboriginal Head Start Urban and Northern Communities Program in Ontario
Early Years Indigenous Cultural Safety Resource Guide
Empathy, Dignity, and Respect: Creating Cultural Safety for Aboriginal People in Urban Health Care
Ethical Professional Practice: Exploring the Issues For Health Services to Rural Aboriginal Communities
Ethical Space for a Sensitive Research Topic: Engaging First Nations Women in the Development of Culturally Safe Human Papillomavirus Screening
Evaluation of a Dementia Awareness Resource for Use in Remote Indigenous Communities
Evaluation of a Native Youth Leadership Program Grounded in Cherokee Culture: The “Remember the Removal” Program
Evaluation of the Indigenous Relationship and Cultural Safety Courses among a sample of Indigenous Services Canada nurses
Explorations of Culture in Session: Stories of White Therapists Working With Native American Clients
Exploring Cervical Cancer Screening Behavour: An Interpretive Description of Aboriginal Women's Experiences
Exploring Resilience and Indigenous Ways of Knowing
Exploring the Health and Well-Being of Children and Youth in Winneway, Québec
Exploring Why and How Encounters with the Norwegian Health-care System can be Considered Culturally Unsafe by North Sami-Speaking Patients and Relatives: A Qualitative Study Based on 11 Interviews
Factors Influencing Access to Urban General Practices and Primary Health Care by Aboriginal Australians: A Qualitative Study
Failure of Mainstream Well-being Measures to Appropriately Reflect the Well-being of Indigenous and Local Communities and its Implications for Welfare Policies
Finding a Balanced Approach: Incorporating Medicine Wheel Teachings in the Care of Aboriginal People at the End of Life
First Come, First Served: Postcolonial Barriers to Traditional Food Consumption in Aboriginal Communities in Canada
First Nations Food, Nutrition & Environment Study (FNFNES): Results from Manitoba 2010
First Nations Healing in the Hospital: On the Quest to Implement Indigenous Healing in a Clinical Setting
First Nations, Inuit and Métis Cancer Care Priorities A Document Review of First Nations, Inuit and Métis Cancer Care Engagement (2011-2018) to Inform the Refresh of the Canadian Strategy for Cancer Control
Review of 48 documents relating to challenges, priorities and promising practices.
First Nations, Inuit, Métis Health Core Competencies: Critical Reflection Tool: Part of the IPAC-AFMC Curriculum Implementation Toolkit for Undergraduate Medical Education
First Nations, Inuit, Métis Health Core Competencies: Curriculum Implementation Toolkit for Undergraduate Medical Education
Designed to assist faculties of medicine in furthering the competencies as stated in the curriculum framework. Discusses rationale and process of community engagement, collaborative vision, pedagogy, implementation, and evaluation.