期刊
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH-REVUE CANADIENNE DE SANTE PUBLIQUE
卷 113, 期 2, 页码 211-221出版社
SPRINGER INT PUBL AG
DOI: 10.17269/s41997-021-00576-7
关键词
Indigenous health; Settler colonialism; Institutional reconciliation; Core competencies; Anti-Indigenous racism; Public health education; Truth and Reconciliation Calls to Action
资金
- Canada Research Chairs program
The research found an uneven focus on Indigenous health issues in Canadian Graduate Public Health Programs, with some positive changes in the curriculum but still a lack of willingness among non-Indigenous (white) professors to educate themselves and take responsibility. However, there is a desire among graduate students to obtain relevant competencies in their training.
Objectives Indigenous peoples are the first peoples of what is now called Canada. Canadians have benefitted from their largesse and contributions in a myriad of ways that remain unacknowledged. Indeed, ongoing colonization and systemic anti-Indigenous racism in all quarters of our society have had heinous impacts on their health and well-being. Despite this reality and multiple calls for redress, Indigenous health is still missing from the Core Competencies for Public Health in Canada, having obvious implications for public health training programs and subsequent practice. Our objective in this paper is to critically explore the reasons behind institutional apathy for reconciliation in Indigenous health. Methods Interviews were conducted with 19 leaders in Canadian Graduate Public Health Programs (CGPHPs) at 15 universities to explore the extent to which CGPHPs engage with Canada's 2015 Truth and Reconciliation Commission's Calls to Action to address Indigenous health. We used thematic discourse analysis to illuminate the landscape and make recommendations. Results Participants agree that Indigenous health is important, but our data reveal an uneven landscape for addressing the Calls to Action. Curriculum was limited though we noted modest positive change. On the whole, the non-Indigenous (white) professoriate still needs to educate themselves while not all see the need to do so. Many deflected responsibility. Yet anecdotally, there is desire among CGPHP students who are already unsettling themselves to see such competency in their training. Conclusion It is a settler evasion to claim lack of expertise, to express a desire to limit the burden on Indigenous academics, and to stand on the sidelines of institutional inertia. Our findings are a call to CGPHPs to do better.
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