| Literature DB >> 33287787 |
Billie-Jo Hardy1, Alexa Lesperance2, Iehente Foote2, Michelle Firestone3,4, Janet Smylie5,3,4,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Research carried out in partnership with Indigenous youth at The Native Youth Sexual Health Network (NYSHN) demonstrates that Indigenous youth can (and do) develop and implement public health interventions amongst their peers and within their communities, when supported by non-youth allies and mentors.Entities:
Keywords: Implementation research; Implementation science; Indigenous; Indigenous health; Indigenous youth; Public health; Public health implementation research
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33287787 PMCID: PMC7720630 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-09863-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1a Core Public Health Implementation Research Steps and b Indigenous Implementation Science Model
Fig. 2How to support and facilitate self-determination with Indigenous youth
Practical suggestions to improve health services and research for and with
| Health Programs and Services for Indigenous youth | Research for and with Indigenous Youth |
|---|---|
| Programs and services intended for Indigenous youth need to provide safe spaces for Indigenous youth expertise | Research with and about Indigenous youth needs to be culturally safe |
| Program and service priorities and agendas need to be informed by Indigenous youth expertise | Research with and about Indigenous youth should be inclusive andopen-ended |
| Invest financially in Indigenous youth and peerleadership for programs and services | Indigenous youth must be partners in research with and/or about them |
| There needs to be more visibility for what works for Indigenous youth | Research with and about Indigenous youth must be wellness-based |
| Good research is sustainable in that it builds relationships with Indigenousyouth, sharing roles, responsibilities and opportunities as partners; empowersyouth; and, respects their interest in self-determination |
Features of promising practices that apply to IS and PHIR for and with Indigenous youth
| Meet youth where they are at | Be supportive of Indigenous youth, not judgmental. Knowing and doing should be focused on harm reduction with Indigenous youth |
|---|---|
| Culturally safe | There should be no stigma, shame and blame. Knowing and doing should enable learning. |
| Wellness–based and fun | Knowing and doing should be uplifting and fun – Indigenous youth are inspiring and lookingfor inspiration. |
| Accessible | Knowing and doing needs to be accessible. Efforts should be made to tailor language andcommunication tools in ways that speak to Indigenous youth (e.g. social media). Also,programs and services need to lower barriers – Indigenous youth should not need toidentify as at-risk to be eligible as it further victimizes them and as an approach it often failsto acknowledge its basis in colonialism. |
| Youth-determined | Empower youth and allow them to define what this means to them as it is both contextualand diverse. |
| Peer and Youth-led | The most promising and relevant knowing and doing is led by youth. At the very least, itshould be partnered with youth, where they have clear roles and responsibilities andopportunities for mentorship and leadership. These roles would apply to management andgovernance over funding and resources. |
| Resourced | Knowing and doing about, for and with Indigenous youth needs to be well resourced. Fundsneed to be allocated toward engaging and partnering with youth, compensating youth, andproviding opportunities for training, mentorship and employment. Youth should and need tobe involved in improving their well-being and these contributions should not be undervaluedor undermined by a lack of available resources. |
Fig. 3Knowing and doing: health and wellbeing of Indigenous youth