This article explores how Indigenous Knowledge and medical anthropology can co-construct community health knowledge through boundary work and the use of boundary objects. It will highlight how community-based participatory research (CBPR) in medical anthropology can help co-develop methods and strategies with Indigenous research partners to assess the human health impact of the First Nations water crisis. We draw on a case study of our community-based approach to health research with Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation community stakeholders and McMaster University researchers. We highlight how framing a co-constructed health survey as a boundary object can create dialogical space for Indigenous and western academic pedagogies and p...
Etuaptmumk or Two-Eyed Seeing (E/TES) is foundational in ensuring that Indigenous ways of knowing ar...
THINKING BEYOND AN EVIDENCE-BASED MODEL TO ENHANCE WABANAKI HEALTH: STORY, RESILIENCE AND CHANGE By ...
When issuing drinking water advisories (such as boil water advisories, or BWAs) in First Nations, ri...
First Nations communities in Canada are disproportionately affected by poor water quality. As one ex...
The health disparities between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples in Canada continue to grow desp...
Health research involving Indigenous peoples is regulated by guidelines based on the ethics of Indig...
The Cedar Project is an interdisciplinary, community-driven research project responding to the crise...
Abstract Background There is no shortage of epidemiol...
There is a global priority to protect and revitalize Indigenous knowledge (IK) and increasing eviden...
Currently, there is a need for implementing ethical, culturally safe practices when engaging in rese...
The Cedar Project is an interdisciplinary, community-driven research project responding to the crise...
Health disparities among Native Americans persist despite efforts to translate evidence-based progra...
Indigenous peoples experience poorer health outcomes on almost every measure of health and wellbeing...
Currently, there is a need for implementing ethical, culturally safe practices when engaging in rese...
ABSTRACT Context: This is a community engagement model which evolved from a Mixed Methods Participa...
Etuaptmumk or Two-Eyed Seeing (E/TES) is foundational in ensuring that Indigenous ways of knowing ar...
THINKING BEYOND AN EVIDENCE-BASED MODEL TO ENHANCE WABANAKI HEALTH: STORY, RESILIENCE AND CHANGE By ...
When issuing drinking water advisories (such as boil water advisories, or BWAs) in First Nations, ri...
First Nations communities in Canada are disproportionately affected by poor water quality. As one ex...
The health disparities between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples in Canada continue to grow desp...
Health research involving Indigenous peoples is regulated by guidelines based on the ethics of Indig...
The Cedar Project is an interdisciplinary, community-driven research project responding to the crise...
Abstract Background There is no shortage of epidemiol...
There is a global priority to protect and revitalize Indigenous knowledge (IK) and increasing eviden...
Currently, there is a need for implementing ethical, culturally safe practices when engaging in rese...
The Cedar Project is an interdisciplinary, community-driven research project responding to the crise...
Health disparities among Native Americans persist despite efforts to translate evidence-based progra...
Indigenous peoples experience poorer health outcomes on almost every measure of health and wellbeing...
Currently, there is a need for implementing ethical, culturally safe practices when engaging in rese...
ABSTRACT Context: This is a community engagement model which evolved from a Mixed Methods Participa...
Etuaptmumk or Two-Eyed Seeing (E/TES) is foundational in ensuring that Indigenous ways of knowing ar...
THINKING BEYOND AN EVIDENCE-BASED MODEL TO ENHANCE WABANAKI HEALTH: STORY, RESILIENCE AND CHANGE By ...
When issuing drinking water advisories (such as boil water advisories, or BWAs) in First Nations, ri...