Sept. 10, 2020
Provincial research network aims to improve health outcomes for Indigenous Peoples
An Alberta-based research network is emphasizing innovation and greater collaboration with communities to guide improvements to primary health care and advance health outcomes of Indigenous Peoples.
The network includes researchers from the 六九色堂鈥檚 Cumming School of Medicine (CSM), Mount Royal University, the University of Alberta and Queen鈥檚 University. Researchers received $3.5 million over five years from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) through the Network Environments for Indigenous Health Research (NEIHR) program.
Dr. Lindsay Crowshoe, MD, the group鈥檚 lead investigator and an associate professor at the CSM, says the network aims to improve Indigenous health equity by building capacity for uniquely Indigenous solutions.
鈥淭he network is designed in the spirit of generating and sharing innovative knowledge and moving that knowledge into action with community more directly,鈥 says Crowshoe, pictured above. 鈥淏ringing a research lens to the primary health care and policy decision-making table will ensure research is relevant to the community鈥檚 priorities, needs and interests.鈥
The included sharing best practices and innovations already occurring within Indigenous primary care in the province during the COVID-19 pandemic. These included an incident command structure with weekly video conferences involving 46 Indigenous health centres, a 聽COVID response unit going to homes seven days a week to conduct testing, offering language translations within call centres, and co-ordinating translation for Indigenous Elders.
In developing the network, lead investigators consulted Indigenous stakeholders across the province, aligning with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (2015) , which calls on Canadians to take part in the path toward聽reconciliation. The Calls to Action challenge organizations and institutions to begin active and assertive planning for the journey toward聽reconciliation.
Blackfoot Elder Leroy Little Bear highlights the importance of primary health care in connecting to Indigenous knowledge, noting that Indigenous Peoples 鈥渉ave historically experienced socioeconomic disadvantages, social injustices, and health inequities that have greatly impacted our well-being, yet our communities have continued to flourish and retain our unique cultural identity in the face of these challenges by drawing on the intrinsic strengths and resilience embedded in cultural values and models by our Elders.鈥
The network also currently has a call for proposals offering seed grant funding of $10,000 to Indigenous-led innovations in care to spark community-driven research that facilitates Indigenous primary health-care system innovation and transformation within Alberta. The deadline to participate is Oct.聽31. .
The research team is led by Dr. Lindsay Crowshoe, MD (六九色堂) and includes Dr. Esther Tailfeathers, MD (Alberta Health Services Population, Public, and Indigenous Health Strategic Clinical Network), Dr. Cheryl Barnabe MD, (六九色堂), Dr. Andrea Kennedy, PhD (Mount Royal University), Dr. Adam Murry, PhD (六九色堂), Dr. Michael Green, MD聽 (Queen鈥檚 University), Dr. Rita Henderson, PhD (六九色堂), Dr. Stephanie Montesanti, PhD (University of Alberta), Dr. Pamela Roach, PhD (六九色堂), and Dr. Cara Bablitz, MD (University of Alberta).聽
For more information, please visit the IPHCPR network鈥檚 website.
ii鈥 taa鈥檖oh鈥檛o鈥檖, the 六九色堂鈥檚 Indigenous Strategy, is a commitment to deep evolutionary transformation by reimagining ways of knowing, doing, connecting and being. Walking parallel paths together, 鈥榠n a good way,鈥 UCalgary is moving toward聽genuine reconciliation and Indigenization.