Project 458688

Indigenous-led evaluation research of health service partnerships between Indigenous medicine and bio-medicine practitioners in eastern Manitoba

458688

Indigenous-led evaluation research of health service partnerships between Indigenous medicine and bio-medicine practitioners in eastern Manitoba

$105,000
Project Information
Study Type: Unclear
Research Theme: Health systems / services
Institution & Funding
Principal Investigator(s): Allen, Lindsay P
Supervisor(s): Hatala, Andrew R; Mignone, Javier J
Institution: University of Manitoba
CIHR Institute: Indigenous Peoples' Health
Program: Doctoral Research Award: Canada Graduate Scholarships
Peer Review Committee: Doctoral Research Awards - B
Competition Year: 2021
Term: 3 yrs 0 mth
Abstract Summary

Indigenous Peoples in Canada have poorer health outcomes than the general population because of the racism, inequity, discrimination, and oppression inherent in our policies, systems, and structures. Indigenous Peoples have strong ancient healing traditions, but these were suppressed and outlawed by Canadian governments until the 1950s. There is now a cultural revitalization happening, including of traditional medicines, which support Indigenous health and healing. In some parts of Canada, Indigenous healers and medical doctors are even learning how to work together for the sake of the patient. In Manitoba, for example, there is the Pine Falls Hospital which has regular medical exam rooms, but it also has a traditional ceremony room and traditional foods and herbs. This is a huge win after many years of advocacy on the part of nearby Indigenous communities to be able to access traditional medicines once more. Still, discrimination and cross-cultural misunderstandings linger. This project proposes to run a training series for hospital staff on relevant history (e.g., the impacts of colonization, Residential Schools, the Sixties Scoop, the Millennial Scoop) and Indigenous culture (e.g., visiting Elders, learning about traditional medicines). The expectations are to 1. build cross-cultural relationships with the hospital and the larger community, 2. reduce discrimination so Indigenous people feel safer accessing the hospital, ultimately improving health outcomes, 3. develop a curriculum and model for doing the same training in other parts of Canada, 4. document traditional medicine knowledge for the future generations to come, 5. share what we learn widely in many different platforms. This project was initiated by the Turtle Lodge Council of Indigenous Elders who have a vision of peaceful, sustainable, and healthy communities far into the future.

No special research characteristics identified

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

Keywords
Anti-Oppressive Training Cross-Cultural Health Care Cultural Safety Decolonial Methodologies Health Equity Health Policy Research Indigenous Health Services Indigenous Research Methodologies Transformative Evaluation Research Truth And Reconciliation