Community-Engaged and Culturally Relevant Research to Develop Behavioral Health Interventions with American Indians and Alaska Natives
Community Setting as a Determinant of Health for Indigenous Peoples Living in the Prairie Provinces of Canada: High Rates and Advanced Presentations of Tuberculosis
Community-Specific Risk and Protective Factors for Risky Alcohol Consumption in American Indian Women of Reproductive Potential: Informing Interventions
Comparison of Women Offenders Who Use Opioids Versus Other Types of Substances
Concentrations of Blood and Hair Mercury and Serum PCBs in an Ojibwa Population that Consumes Great Lakes Region Fish
Condom Use Among First Nations People Living On-Reserve in Ontario
Contemplating Remote Presence Technology for Culturally Safe Health Care for Rural Indigenous Children
Continuity and Change in Wemindji Cree Childbirth Experiences and Practices: Past and Present
Anthropology Thesis (PhD) -- McGill University, 2019.
Cost of the Revised Northern Food Basket in 2018-2019
Cultural Humility and Elder Story-Telling: A Locally Developed, Best Practice Informed Intervention
Looks at the development of a cultural humility with Indigenous peoples, requiring self-reflection and a changing of attitudes and behaviours.
Cultural Safety and Humility Case Study Report
Cultural Safety Training for Health Professionals Working with Indigenous Populations in Montreal, Quebec
The Culture is Prevention Project: Adapting the Cultural Connectedness Scale for Multi-Tribal Communities
Cybersafety for an Indigenous Youth Population
Death in the Daily Life of the Ross Colony: Mortuary Behavior in Frontier Russian America
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.
Decolonizing Motherhood: Exampining Birthing Experiences of Urban Indigenous Women in Nova Scotia
Sociology Thesis (MA) -- Acadia University, 2019.
Deconstructing Fetal Alcohol Syndrome: A Critical Inquiry into the Discourse around Alcohol, Women, Ethnicity, Aboriginals and Disease
Decreasing Traditional Food Use Affects Diet Quality for Adult Dene/Métis in 16 Communities of the Canadian Northwest Territories
Deer Hunting: An Innovative Teaching Paradigm to Educate Indigenous Youth about Physical Literacy
Defining the Indefinable: Descriptors of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples' Cultures and Their Links to Health and Wellbeing: A Literature Review
A Demographic View of Northern Cheyenne Women in 1900
A Dene First Nation’s Community Readiness Assessment to Take Action against HIV/AIDS: A Pilot Project
Department of National Health and Welfare, Medical Services Branch, Indian and Northern Health Annual Report, Fiscal Year 1983-1984
Determinants of the Risk and Timing of Alcohol and Illicit Drug Use Onset Among Natives and Non-natives: Similarities and Differences
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 the Tribal Resource Guide and the Poverty and Culture Training: The We RISE (Raising Income, Supporting Education) Study
Christine W. Hockett
Diabetes amongst the Métis Nation of Alberta
Diabetes as a Disease of Civilization: The Impact of Culture Change on Indigenous Peoples
Diabetes In The Torres Strait
Diabetes Research at Nunkuwarrin Yunti: Through the Eyes of an Aboriginal Health Worker
Diet Quality in Canada: Policy Solutions for Equity
Authors note that Canada’s new Healthy Eating Strategy does not address social determinants of health (childhood environments, gender, Indigenous status, income, education and occupation) as root causes of poor diet quality; they suggest that a reduction of diet inequities will require policy change.