Carrie Bourassa
Jan. 28, 2019
Noojimo Mikana (A Healing Path): Insights from a Canadian leader in Indigenous Peoples' health research
Dr. Carrie Bourassa, PhD, didnât get into the field of Indigenous health on purpose. But, with more than 15 years of experience in Indigenous health research, and as the current scientific director of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)Â , youâd never guess it.
âI never had a plan, or a career path â I just knew I had to get to university,â says Dr. Bourassa of her journey. Growing up in Reginaâs inner-city, she was the first in her family to complete high school.
âI came from a lot of dysfunction,â she says. âMy mom and dad were teenagers when they had me, so I grew up mostly with my grandfather, who had a Grade 3 education. My mom had Grade 7, and my dad had Grade 8. Staying in school was often at the urging of my grandfather, who kept telling me Iâd be the first to be a doctor or lawyer. He kept me on that path. But I am very grateful to my parents who also encouraged me and passed on an incredibly strong work ethic.â
A complex network of communities
Now, as the scientific director of IIPH, one of the 13 institutes within the CIHR, Bourassa leads the advancement of a research agenda to improve and promote the health of First Nations, Inuit and MĂ©tis peoples across Canada through funding, capacity-building programs and training for Indigenous researchers. This complex task requires respectful consultation and collaboration with our countryâs diverse Indigenous communities.
And it is diversity that sits at the core of Bourassaâs vision. âEven using the term ±őČÔ»ćŸ±Č”±đČÔŽÇłÜČőÌęis difficult, and not everyone has the same issues,â she says. âFor example, treatment for diabetes among First Nations isnât going to be the same among Inuit and MĂ©tis people. Yes, there are things that bind us together, but we need to avoid pan-Indigenism and be flexible in our approach, so we can ensure that the voices and needs of communities are heard.â
Carrie Bourassa
Privileging Indigenous knowledge
Since her role started in February 2017, Bourassa and her team have conducted community engagement activities across the country, which informed the IIPHâs strategic plan, launching in the spring. This process also helped them understand priorities. âA lot of what we heard was about preserving self-determination,â she says. âIndigenous communities really need to be driving the research agenda.â
By listening to communities, Bourassa works to incorporate Indigenous ways of knowing into traditionally colonial research paradigms. âWeâre trying to make it so that Elders and Traditional Knowledge Keepers can be nominated as Principle Investigators on grants,â she says. âTheyâre the real PhDs, and they not only know what the issues are in their communities, they also know how to solve the problems.â
In her inadvertent journey so far, Bourassa has found a personal healing path in community-based research that has led her to exciting leadership opportunities. She has also learned that Indigenous health isnât something that we can compartmentalize. âIt isnât just physical health. Itâs everything you see, everything that touches you. And itâs so vitally important to take direction from community and humble yourself.â
On Feb 7, 2019, Bourassa presented her lecture, Noojimo Mikana (A Healing Path): Research as Reconciliation, at the ÁùŸĆÉ«ÌĂ's downtown campus. The event was the fourth of five lectures in ii' taa'poh'to'pâs 2018-19Â Indigenous Knowledge Public Lecture Series.Â
, the ÁùŸĆÉ«ÌĂâs Indigenous Strategy, is a commitment to deep evolutionary transformation by reimagining ways of knowing, doing, connecting and being. Walking parallel paths together, âin a good way,â UCalgary will move towards genuine reconciliation and Indigenization.