Literature DB >> 30870024

Developing the Alliances to Expand Traditional Indigenous Healing Practices Within Alberta Health Services.

Jazmine Leigh Drost1,2.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Indigenous people have unique health needs that require culturally appropriate holistic care that addresses physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual health. Access to both traditional Indigenous healing practices and Western medicine are needed for all encompassing holistic health.
DESIGN: This inquiry addresses actions suggested by the United Nations (UN) and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC) with regard to traditional Indigenous medicine and healing and was guided by an Organizational Sponsor and Inquiry Team.
SETTING: The fieldwork for this study took place within Alberta Health Services (AHS), established in 2008 when 12 separate health entities merged to become Canada's first and largest fully integrated provincial health system. PARTICIPANTS: Two Elders and a Cultural Helper provided perspectives on cultural protocols surrounding the traditional Indigenous sweat lodge ceremony. Three Indigenous community members provided perspectives on AHS services and holistic health through participation in the traditional Indigenous sweat lodge ceremony. Seven AHS administrative employees provided perspectives on implementation.
INTERVENTIONS: This study was conducted within an action research framework and the researcher conducted a literature review, interviews, and a focus group to allow for triangulation.
RESULTS: Throughout the interviews and focus group, participants consistently emphasized the importance of increasing efforts to expand traditional Indigenous healing practices within AHS, giving rise to the primary study theme: Expanding Traditional Indigenous Healing Practices within AHS. Several subthemes emerged in support of this primary focus, including the following: (1) enhancing cultural competency and safety training among leadership and employees; (2) adhering to tradition and protocol; (3) establishing meaningful partnerships; (4) strengthening organizational facets of program delivery; and (5) need for additional financial, human, and logistical resources.
CONCLUSIONS: During this time of reconciliation with Indigenous peoples in Canada and beyond, health care leaders and providers have an ethical responsibility and important opportunity to help improve the troubling health disparities at hand. This will inevitably require tremendous reflection, humility, courage, and commitment by stakeholders at all levels, as they work to transform health systems that disproportionately disadvantage Indigenous ways of knowing and being while implicitly privileging Eurocentric, biomedical perspectives. This pursuit, despite the barriers that may arise, is a moral, social, and political imperative for all those health care workers who seek to reduce suffering.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Indigenous health; holistic health; integrative health services; sweat lodge; traditional healing practices

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30870024     DOI: 10.1089/acm.2018.0387

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Altern Complement Med        ISSN: 1075-5535            Impact factor:   2.579


  3 in total

1.  Beyond Professional Licensure: A Statement of Principle on Culturally-Responsive Healthcare.

Authors:  Nadine Ijaz; Michelle Steinberg; Tami Flaherty; Tania Neubauer; Ariana Thompson-Lastad
Journal:  Glob Adv Health Med       Date:  2021-11-30

2.  Identifying priorities, directions and a vision for Indigenous mental health using a collaborative and consensus-based facilitation approach.

Authors:  Stephanie Montesanti; Kayla Fitzpatrick; Bryan Fayant; Caillie Pritchard
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2022-03-27       Impact factor: 2.655

Review 3.  Integrating Indigenous healing practices within collaborative care models in primary healthcare in Canada: a rapid scoping review.

Authors:  Melissa Corso; Astrid DeSouza; Ginny Brunton; Hainan Yu; Carolina Cancelliere; Silvano Mior; Anne Taylor-Vaisey; Kathy MacLeod-Beaver; Pierre Côté
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2022-06-16       Impact factor: 3.006

  3 in total

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