Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) J. King , Nicole Lindsay , David Loewen , M. Greenwood , Tom Rockmore , Daniel Breazeale
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of Northern British Columbia, National Collaborating Centre for Aboriginal Health (NCCAH), Canada, MAIS, Athabasca University, Canada, University of British Columbia Press
ANO 2008
TIPO Book
CITAÇÕES 4
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 e4beedcaf40df214a2ccbc5f6a7d2908
MD5 fb2d58c6477b1e066b010fef4f2816d7
MD5 eec1f29e69d7e290d0830af15c87d4e7
MD5 d4411b50bf2505db86919c4b57af0f77

Resumo

This article discusses transformations underway within Indigenous health in northern British Columbia and Canada. We highlight two organizations that are working to create ethical space and cultural safety at the intersections of Indigenous knowledge about health and wellness, Western medicine, and healthcare services for Indigenous peoples in Canada. The article argues that the cultural, organizational, and systemic transformations necessary to address the deep and ongoing health inequities experienced by Indigenous populations should be rooted in Indigenous knowledges and should prioritize Indigenous voices, values, and concepts. Cultural safety, ethical space, and Two-Eyed Seeing are three examples of ideas anchored in Indigenous knowledges that speak to relationships at the interface of different systems of knowledge. We offer some examples of how a public health knowledge translation centre and a regional health service delivering organization are actualizing these concepts in their work nationally and regionally in northern British Columbia, Canada.

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