Project 442917

Kloshe Tillicum: Creating trustworthy and culturally meaningful public health guidance to address COVID-19 in Indigenous communities

442917

Kloshe Tillicum: Creating trustworthy and culturally meaningful public health guidance to address COVID-19 in Indigenous communities

$96,692
Project Information
Study Type: Unclear
Research Theme: Social / Cultural / Environmental / Population Health
Institution & Funding
Principal Investigator(s): Salway, Travis; Chenery, Jessica C; Pruden, Harlan
Co-Investigator(s): Boyce, Andrea; Rempel, Emily S
Institution: Simon Fraser University (Burnaby, B.C.)
CIHR Institute: Indigenous Peoples' Health
Program: Indigenous COVID-19 Rapid Research Funding Opportunity - Knowledge Synthesis
Peer Review Committee: Indigenous COVID-19 Rapid Research Funding Opportunity
Competition Year: 2020
Term: 1 yr 0 mth
Abstract Summary

Trust between public health authorities and the public is required to successfully reduce the impacts of COVID-19 and to slow the epidemic. Participation in contact tracing activities, compliance with physical distancing measures, and uptake of vaccines all depend on this trust. The COVID-19 pandemic has unfortunately revealed a concerning trend, with a gap in trust between many Indigenous communities and public health authorities. Kloshe Tillicum means "good relations" in Chinook Jargon. The rapid research we propose builds on longstanding relations between our team-the BC Centre for Disease Control (BCCDC)'s Chee Mamuk program-and numerous Indigenous communities through BC, as well as a provincial survey examining misinformation related to COVID-19 (N=3,073 respondents, April 2020). In conversation with First Nations partners of Chee Mamuk, we have heard members of some communities express confusion over discrepancies in COVID-19-related messages they receive from different levels of government and different sources (media, social media, word-of-mouth, public health, etc.). Meanwhile, other communities have told of missed opportunities for meaningful Indigenous community involvement in public health-directed contact tracing efforts. This rapid knowledge synthesis, working with Indigenous communities throughout BC and the BCCDC, will assess community-led strategies to build trust with regard to the following COVID-19 related activities: testing, contact tracing, social/physical distancing, and vaccination. We will meet this objective through Indigenous and community-led methodologies that have been established and used by our team for many years. Through activities-based focus groups, we will identify culturally meaningful ways to engage communities in COVID-19 prevention measures.

No special research characteristics identified

This project does not include any of the advanced research characteristics tracked in our database.

Keywords
Community-Based Research Covid-19 Health Communications Indigenous Needs Assessment Public Trust