| Literature DB >> 34993444 |
Annette Schultz1,2, Thang Nguyen3,4, Moneca Sinclaire1, Randy Fransoo4, Elizabeth McGibbon5.
Abstract
Colonization and enforced genocidal strategies have collectively fractured and changed Indigenous people by attempting to erase and dismiss their voices and knowledge. Nearly a decade ago, we were reminded by Dr Ku Young of the cardiovascular health disparities, in evidence among Indigenous people in Canada. compared with White people. He went on to say that beyond a biomedical understanding of this health status is the ongoing impact of long-standing marginalization and oppression faced by Indigenous people. Limited attention has been afforded to advance our understanding of these colonial impacts on Indigenous people and their heart health. This article contributes to our collective understanding of Indigenous people and their cardiac health by covering the following topics: layers of foundational truths of relevance to healthcare contexts and Indigenous people; a critical reflection of Western (biomedical) perspectives concerning cardiac health among Indigenous people; and materials from 2 studies, funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, in which Indigenous voices and experiences were privileged concerning the heart and caring for the heart. In the final section, 3 topics are offered as starting points for self-reflection and acts of reconciliation within healthcare practice, decision-making, and research: reflections on self and one's worldview; anti-racist healthcare practice; and 2-eyed seeing approaches to work within healthcare contexts. A common thread is the imperative for "un-silencing" Indigenous people's voices, experiences, and knowledge, which is a requirement if addressing the identified cardiovascular health disparities is truly a health priority.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34993444 PMCID: PMC8712585 DOI: 10.1016/j.cjco.2021.09.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CJC Open ISSN: 2589-790X
Counting Indigenous people across Canada based on 2016 Canadian Census
| Territory or Province | Nunavut | NWT | Yukon | BC | AB | SK | MB | ON | QB | NB | NS | PEI | NL & Labrador |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Provincial/territorial population of Indigenous people. n | 30,550 | 20,860 | 8195 | 270,585 | 258,640 | 175,015 | 223,310 | 374,395 | 182,890 | 29,380 | 51,495 | 2740 | 45,725 |
| Indigenous people, % of provincial/territorial population | 85.9 | 50.7 | 23.3 | 5.9 | 6.5 | 16 | 18 | 2.8 | 2.3 | 4 | 5.7 | 1.9 | 8.9 |
| Provincial/territorial Indigenous people, % of Indigenous people in Canada | 1.8 | 1.2 | 0.5 | 16.2 | 15.5 | 10.5 | 13.3 | 22.4 | 10.9 | 1.8 | 3.1 | 1.6 | 2.7 |
| First Nations people, n (%)of Indigenous people in province/territory | 190 | 13,185 | 6690 | 172,520 | 136,585 | 114,570 | 130,585 | 236,680 | 92,655 | 17,575 | 25,830 | 1875 | 28,375 |
| Métis, n (%) of Indigenous people in province/territory | 165 (0.5) | 3390 | 1015 | 89,450 | 114,375 | 57,880 | 89,360 (40) | 120,585 | 69,360 | 10,200 | 23,310 | 710 (26) | 7790 (17) |
| Inuit, n (%) of Indigenous people in province/territory | 30,140 (98.7) | 4080 (19.6) | 225 (2.7) | 1615 (0.6) | 2500 (1) | 360 (0.2) | 610 (0.3) | 3860 (1) | 13,945 (7.6) | 385 (1.3) | 795 (1.5) | 75 (2.7) | 6450 (14) |
AB, Alberta; BC, British Columbia; MB, Manitoba; NS, Nova Scotia; NB, New Brunswick; NL, Newfoundland; NWT, Northwest Territories; ON, Ontario; PEI, Prince Edward Island; QB, Quebec; SK, Saskatchewan.
Figure 1Mapping of Indian residential schools across Canada, which were in operation from the late 1820s until 1998. The network of 148 institutions spanned all Canadian provinces and territories.
Figure 2Debwewin study logo was designed by an Indigenous Multimedia Creative Dwayne Bird. The turtle represents, as in the Anishinaabe teachings, the sacred teaching of truth. The back of the turtle uses silhouettes of people overlaid on a heart. This is a representation of the people involved in listening/looking and discovering the truth of why Indigenous peoples suffer from heart disease.
Figure 3Reconciliation—realizing synergies arising from reflecting on one’s worldview and consideration of other worldviews, stepping into antiracist healthcare practices, and working with 2-eyed seeing approaches.
Figure 4Two-eyed seeing, and opening to new ways of seeing and understanding.