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Alcohol and American Indians
Book Reviews
The Cedar Project - Mobile Phone Use and Acceptability of Mobile Health Among Young Indigenous People Who Have Used Drugs in British Columbia, Canada: Mixed Methods Exploratory Study
Collaborative Data Governance to Support First Nations-Led Overdose Surveillance and Data Analysis in British Columbia, Canada
Discusses the collection of Indigenous opioid-related overdoses data that adheres to the OCAP principles and supports Indigenous self-determination.
Colonial Policies and Indigenous Women in Canada
Community Awareness of Outreach Efforts to Reduce Underage Drinking on California Indian Reservations
Community-led Recovery from the Opioid Crisis through Culturally-based Programs and Community-based Data Governance
Examines the community-based opioid agonist treatment (OAT) program Naandwe Miikan (The Health Path).
Content Analysis Informing the Development of Adapted Harm Reduction Talking Circles (HaRTC) with Urban American Indians and Alaska Natives Experiencing Alcohol Use Disorder
Using a qualitative research study to examine the use of a more culturally significant intervention and treatment for alcohol abuse amongst Indigenous communities.
Counselor Training as a Therapy for Alcohol Abuse Among Aboriginal People
COVID-19 Information for First Nations in Alberta
The Culture is Prevention Project: Measuring Culture As a Social Determinant of Mental Health for Native/Indigenous Peoples
Department of National Health and Welfare, Medical Services Branch, Indian and Northern Health Services Directorate Annual Report, Fiscal Year 1984-1985
Distribution of the Sweat Lodge in Alcohol Treatment Programs
Don't Look the Other Way: Homelessness among Indigenous and Inuit Persons Milton-Parc Area in Montréal: Investigation Report and Recommendations
Investigation was undertaken due to ongoing complaints about the escalating violence, prostitution and sale of drugs in the inner city neighbourhood.
Drug and Alcohol Policies at Tribal Colleges: A Descriptive Study Assessing Variations in Alcohol and Drug Policy by Setting
Effectiveness of Interventions for the Prevention and Treatment of Substance Use Disorders Among First Nations, Métis and Inuit Populations
Scan of published literature with a focus on cultural and need-based interventions.
An Ethnographic Study of Childbearing Practices Among a Coast Salish Band of Indians in British Columbia
An Examination of Novel Harm Reduction Interventions for Indigenous and Other Youth of Color
Examining Cultural Identification and Alcohol Use among American Indian and Caucasian College Students
The Family Is The Key In Alcohol Abuse
Farewell To Milingimbi
The Health and Alcohol Program In Tasmania: A Worker's Thoughts
The Health of the Aboriginal Populations in Montréal
The Highway of Tears
The Implementation of Rifapentine and Isoniazid (3HP) in two Remote Arctic Communities with a Predominantly Inuit Population, the Taima TB 3HP Study
The Importance of Culture in Alcohol Care: Listening to First Nations staff in Australian Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services
Looks at the use of a bi-cultural approach to address alcoholism within Indigenous communities.
Interviews with American Indian and Alaska Native People Who Inject Drugs
Inuit Behavior and Seasonal Change in the Canadian Arctic
Māori Mental Health Nursing: Growing Our Workforce
A Microcosm of Tobacco Research: An American Indian Northern Plains Review
A literature review of research focusing on smoking rates amongst American Indigenous communities.
Milliya Rumurra - "The New Day" In Broome
Models of Tribal Promising Practices: Tribal Opioid Overdose Prevention, Care Coordination, and Data Systems
Moving Towards Cultural Safety in Mental Health and Addictions Contracting for Urban Indigenous Peoples: Lessons from British Columbia
Health Sciences Thesis (PhD) -- Simon Fraser University, 2020.
Mushrooms
My Testimony
[Native Voices in the City]
Unpublished transcript of excerpts from interviews with 23 Indian residents of Chicago.
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.