NT Aboriginal Health Work Leading the Way
Nursing and Native Peoples in Northern Saskatchewan: 1930s-1950s
One Successful Aboriginal Health Worker: A Case Study
Opinions and Perceptions of Indigenous Mental Health Applications from Service Providers and Youth Samples: A Pilot Study
Otitus Media in Greenland: Studies on Historical, Epidemiological, Microbiological, and Immunological Aspects
Our Health Counts Thunder Bay Factsheets
Survey conducted using Respondent-Driven Sampling resulted in 601 adult and 229 child surveys being completed. In addition to health questions respondents were asked about other topics such as culture, identity, housing, discrimination, and access to justice.
Out of Harmony: Health Problems and Young Native American Men
Pain Management and Health Policy in a Western Washington Indian Tribe
Pandemic Experiences and Impacts of COVID-19 on the Mental Health of Indigenous Communities: Preliminary Knowledge Synthesis
Pekiwewin (coming home): Advancing Good Relations with Indigenous People Experiencing Homelessness
Pekiwewin (Coming Home): Clinical Guidelines for Health and Social Service Providers Working with Indigenous People Experiencing Homelessness: Executive Summary
Perceptions of Care: Aboriginal Patients at the Winnipeg Health Sciences Centre
A Place For Healing: Achieving Health For Aboriginal Women in an Urban Context
The Politics of Disease: Imperial Medicine and the American Indian, 1797-1871
A Postcolonial Discourse Analysis of Community Stakeholders’ Perspectives on Supporting Urban Indigenous Older Adults to Age Well in Ottawa, Canada
Power and Personhood: Health Care Decision-Making in a Plains Indian Community
Practical Guide to Inclusive and Rights-Based Responses to COVID-19 in the Americas
Prevention, Containment, and Management of COVID-19 Cases in Indigenous Territories
A Principled Approach to Research Conducted with Inuit, Métis, and First Nations People: Promoting Engagement Inspired by the CIHR Guidelines for Health Research Involving Aboriginal People (2007-2010)
Examines the use of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research guidelines to guide the collaboration between researchers and Indigenous communities.
A Profile of Hawaiians in the Medicaid Fee-For-Service Program
Promoting Inuit Health through a Participatory Whiteboard Video
Public Health Research in Eeyou Istchee: Report, Current Projects and a Summary of Research on Diabetes
Public Participation in Health Policy: A Case Study of the Region 4 Aboriginal Community Health Council
Reflections of a Native Hawaiian Physician: Hawaiian Cultural Values in Western Medical Practice
Reimagining Indigenous Spaces of Healing: Institutional Environmental Repossession
Rekindling Family Relationships
Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peopes José Francisco Calí Tzay
Research into the COVID-19 Response Plan for Te Pūtahitanga o Te Waipounamu: “Manaaki20 - a collective mobilisation of Māori magic.”
Resilience and Stress among Hopi Female Caregivers
Rethinking Smoking Among Aboriginal Australians: The Harm Minimisation - Abstinence Conundrum
Risk Factors for Spontaneous Preterm Birth among Aboriginal and Non-Aboriginal Women in Manitoba
Sâkipakâwin: An Environmental Scan of Provincial Cancer Supports for Indigenous Patients and their Families in Saskatchewan
Purpose of study was to look at services available in each province and compare them those available in Saskatchewan, highlight gaps in Saskatchewan and make recommendations in light of supports available elsewhere.
Second NACCHO Showcase
Setting the Future For Indigenous Health Studies
Sexual Networks and Sexually Transmitted Infections: A Tale of Two Cities
Si Dios Quiere: Cultural Beliefs of the Mexican-American Impacting Secondary Prevention
SIDS - Indigenous Video Launch
Sociodemographic and Health Care System Factors Influencing Cervical Cancer Screening among Young American Indian Women
Socioeconomic Status, Drug Insurance Benefits, and New Prescriptions for Inhaled Corticosteroids in Schoolchildren With Asthma
Stories of Pediatric Rehabilitation Practitioners with/in Indigenous Communities: A Guide to Becoming Culturally Safer
Primarily focuses on experiences of non-Indigenous professionals working in the field of neurodevelopmental diagnoses and rehabilitation in rural or remote communities.