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Adapting Evidence-Based Tobacco Addiction Treatment for Inuit Living in Ontario: A Qualitative Study of Collaboration and Co-creation to Move From Pan-Indigenous to Inuit-Specific Programming
Examines the IT'S TIME toolkit as a means to provide collaborative culturally relevant treatment for tobacco addiction within Inuit communities.
Assessing the Needs of Urban American Indians in North Texas: A Community-Based Participatory Research Project
At the Interface: Indigenous Health Practitioners and Evidence-based Practice
Bringing Ethics Review Home to Cowichan: Indigenizing Ethics Review in British Columbia, Canada
Using the investigation into high preterm births amongst the Cowichan to examine collaborative research reviews that follow the OCAP principles.
Building on Strengths: Collaborative Intergenerational Health Research with Urban First Nations and Métis Women and Girls
Community-Engaged and Culturally Relevant Research to Develop Behavioral Health Interventions with American Indians and Alaska Natives
Creating Change Using Two-Eyed Seeing, Believing and Doing; Responding to the Journey of Northern First Nations People with HIV
The Culture is Prevention Project: Adapting the Cultural Connectedness Scale for Multi-Tribal Communities
Data Genocide of American Indians and Alaska Natives in COVID-19 Data: A Report Card Grading U.S. States' Quality of COVID-19 Racial Data and Their Effectiveness in Collecting and Reporting Data on American Indian and Alaska Native Populations
Decades of Doing: Indigenous Women Academics Reflect on the Practices of Community-Based Health Research
Drivers of Sexual Health Knowledge for Two-Spirit, Gay, Bi and/or Indigenous Men Who Have Sex with Men (gbMSM)
Enabling First Nations Children to Thrive
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
Failure of Mainstream Well-being Measures to Appropriately Reflect the Well-being of Indigenous and Local Communities and its Implications for Welfare Policies
FNLED: Quebec First Nations Labour and Employment Development Survey = EDMEPN: Enquête sur le développement de la main-d’œuvre et de l’emploi chez les Premières Nations
Graphic Facilitation as a Tool to Guide Community-Based Research on Indigenous Boys’ and Men’s Sexual Health
Health Literacy in Action: Kaupapa Māori Evaluation of a Cardiovascular Disease Medications Health Literacy Intervention
How a Lifecourse Approach Can Promoted Long-term Health and Wellbeing Outcomes for Māori
HPV Knowledge and Attitudes among American Indian and Alaska Native Health and STEM Conference Attendees
“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 Used to be Scared to Even Like Stand Beside Somebody Who Had It": HIV Risk Behaviours and Perceptions among Indigenous People Who Use Drugs
Looks at the lack of education provided for Indigenous people living HIV and how that limits their access to proper supports and testing.
Impact Assessments in Indigenous Contexts: Promising Avenues for Reflection and Improvement for Health Impact Assessments: Report
The Impact of Indigenous Cultural-Safety Education Programs: A Literature Review
Improving Access to Indigenous Medicine for Patients in Hospital-based Settings: A Challenge for Health Systems in Northern Canada
Indigenizing Scholarship to Examine Resilience Among HIV-positive Two-spirit Men: Lessons learned from the 2-Spirit HIV/AIDS Wellness and Longevity Study (2SHAWLS)
Indigenous Health: Applying Truth and Reconciliation in Alberta Health Services
Article examines how Alberta Health Services (AHS) can work to address the health disparities faced by Indigenous peoples in the province. Focuses on collaborative community engagement, relationship building and Indigenous self-determination.
Indigenous Health Research and Reconciliation
Indigenous History: A Bibliography
Making Allyship Work: Allyship Perspectives in a Community-Based Research Study
Medical Experimentation and the Roots of COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy among Indigenous Peoples in Canada
Micro-Reconciliation as a Pathway for Transformative Change
Negotiation, Reciprocity, and Reality: The Experience of Collaboration in a Community-Based Primary Health Care (CBPHC) Program of Research with Eight Manitoba First Nations
Northern Québec James Bay Cree Regional Health Governance in Support of Community Participation: Honouring the "Butterfly"
Not a One-Size-Fits-All Approach: Building Tribal Infrastructure for Research through CRCAIH
Principles, Approaches, and Methods for Evaluation in Indigenous Contexts: A Grey Literature Scoping Review
Psychiatric Research in the Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986: A Systematic Review
The Rationale for Developing a Programme of Services by and for Indigenous Men in a First Nations Community
Research Governance in NunatuKavut: Engagement, Expectations, and Evolution
“A Sacred Undertaking” towards Developing an etuaptmumk (Two-eyed Seeing)-framed Collaborative Research Project and Partnership: The Sanctum 1.5 Hope Through Strength Project
Self-Location and Ethical Space in Wellness Research
Standing with Our American Indian and Alaska Native Women, Girls, and Two-Spirit People: Exploring the Impact of and Resources for Survivors of Human Trafficking
Structures Last Longer than Intentions: Creation of Ongomiizwin – Indigenous Institute of Health and Healing at the University of Manitoba
Stumbling, Not Falling: Reviewing Cultural Competency in Fall Prevention Among Older Indigenous People
A Syllabus for History after the TRC
A Transdisciplinary Approach is Essential to Community-Based Research with American Indian Populations
Truth Respect and Recognition: Addressing Barriers to Indigenous Maternity Care
In response to the study “Prenatal Care among Mothers Involved with Child Protection Services in Manitoba.” Authors note several biases in the study including: failure to discuss negative stereotypes of Indigenous people resulting in differential care, and a disregard of resurgent Indigenous community-led models of care.