Project 448817

Gathering stories to inform culturally safe community strategies (CSCS) to improve trust in public health measures (PHM) in Indigenous peoples (IP) in Northwest Territories (NT)

448817

Gathering stories to inform culturally safe community strategies (CSCS) to improve trust in public health measures (PHM) in Indigenous peoples (IP) in Northwest Territories (NT)

$498,465
Project Information
Study Type: Unclear
Research Theme: Social / Cultural / Environmental / Population Health
Institution & Funding
Principal Investigator(s): Sharma, Sangita; Kandola, Kami; Fraser, Crystal G
Co-Investigator(s): Broughton, Sandra S; DeLancey, Deborah; Doucette, Karen E; Gotay, Carolyn C; Irlbacher-Fox, Stephanie; Kolahdooz, Fariba; Milligan, Crystal; Verhaeghe, Tyler; Wagg, Adrian S
Institution: University of Alberta
CIHR Institute: Indigenous Peoples' Health
Program: Op Gr: Emerging COVID-19 Research Gaps & Priorities - Indigenous Health Research
Peer Review Committee: Operating Grant: Emerging COVID-19 Research Gaps and Priorities-Indigenous Health Research
Competition Year: 2021
Term: 1 yr 0 mth
Abstract Summary

This project will gather stories and experiences of Northwest Territories (NT) Indigenous peoples (IP; men, women, and non-binary) with COVID-19 (C19) public health measures (PHM) and confidence in following PHM to provide culturally relevant, safe, and gender specific suggestions for increasing utilization of C19 PHM. The team is well-positioned to effectively and quickly collect these data as an extension of a CIHR-funded C19 project, which is co-led by Hotii ts'eeda SPOR Unit in NT, partnered with 10 NT communities, and guided by a Community Advisory Board (CAB), that includes Elders and youth. Using a community based approach and Indigenous methodologies (e.g. storytelling), we will recruit 200 IP for one-on-one open-ended interviews to: 1. Gather stories from IP on experience with PHM and healthcare services and confidence in following PHM (e.g. social gathering restrictions, travel restrictions) and how this differentiates by gender; 2. Identify the barriers to and opportunities for improving confidence in PHM and safety measures; 3. Document recommendations from IP to inform culturally safe community strategies to increase the following of C19 PHM; and 4. Disseminate findings to communities, governments, Indigenous governments and organizations, international Indigenous partners utilizing an Integrated Knowledge Translation approach. We will contribute to local capacity building, employment, and sustainability by hiring community research assistants to recruit and host interviews. Data will be analyzed qualitatively using a narrative approach guided by the CAB. The team is comprised of Indigenous researchers, NT public health policymakers, specialists/experts (qualitative research, C19 pandemic research) and international and national collaborators/advisory board members, and therefore results will be relevant for Indigenous Arctic communities at the community, regional, territorial, national and international levels.

No special research characteristics identified

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

Keywords
Community-Based Participatory Research Confidence In Science Covid-19 Prevention Indigenous Approaches Indigenous Health Northwest Territories Public Health Messaging