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    Find journal articles, books, magazines, websites, and more for your cultural safety learning journey.

Hannah Diether2023-08-16T21:45:28+00:00

Websites

National Centre for Truth & Reconciliation

FNHA’s First Nations Perspective on Health and Wellness

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Taking a Trauma-Informed Approach to Foods & Indigenous Knowledge

Trauma-Informed Approaches for Substance-use Treatment

National Collaborating Centre for Indigenous Health

Culturally Connected

UBC Indian Residential School & Dialogue Centre: Learning

Beyond 94: Truth and Reconciliation Canada

Key Moments in Indigenous History

Witness Blanket–A National Monument to recognize the atrocities of Indian residential schools

Articles

American Journal of Public Health: Implicit Racial/Ethnic Bias Among Health Care Professionals and Its Influence on Health Care Outcomes: A Systematic Review

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BCMJ Systemic Racism and Medicine:
A commentary

BMC Medical Ethics: Implicit Bias in healthcare professionals: a systemic review.

FNHA Policy Statement on Cultural Safety and Humility

Jagged Worldviews Colliding

National Collaborating Center for Determinants of Health-Let’s talk about racism and health and equity

National Collaborating Center for Determinants of Health-Social determinants of health: Indigenous experiences with racism and its impacts

Visions Journal: What is Indigenous Cultural Safety—and Why Should I Care About It?

Visions Journal:Indigenous People: reconciliation and healing

Reports

Equip Health Care Research: Why Focus on Indigenous People? A Tool for Health & Social Service Organizations & Providers

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First Nations Regional Health Survey 2015-17 Interior Region

FNHA Cultural Safety & Humility Case Study Report

Health and Health Care Implications of Systemic Racism on Indigenous Peoples in Canada

Nursing Inquiry: Genocide by a million paper cuts

Ta Saantii Deu/Neso–A profile of Metis Youth Health in BC

Books

21 Things you may not know about the Indian Act–Bob Joseph

The Inconvenient Indian: A curious account of Native people in North America by Thomas King

Central Interior Rural Division of Family Practice (CIRD)
Suite 205, 366 Yorston Street,
Williams Lake, BC V2G 4J5. | info@cirdivision.ca
https://divisionsbc.ca

The CIR Division is located within the unceded, ancestral, and occupied, traditional lands of the Secwepemc, Tsilhqot’in and Dakelh Nations. We acknowledge the health inequities caused by current and historical colonization of this territory and we humbly work to listen and learn from the resilience and strength of Indigenous peoples.

Photos used by permission of WLFN, taken by Keira Elise | Kayla Jasper | Julie Elizabeth | Additional Photography by Tammy Haller

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