Promoting reconciliation through research collaboration between Xaaynangaa Naay and Northern Health Authority: Beginning the dialogue

This project was supported by the Government of Canada through a SSHRC Connection Grant. The authors acknowledge the contributions of Lauren Brown, Director, Janet Rigg, Mental Health and Wellness Counsellor, and Waneeta Richardson, First Nations Health Authority, in leading the background work on w...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hartney, Elizabeth, Gladstone, Susan
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Royal Roads University 2019
Subjects:
Kay
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.25316/ir-3759
https://viurrspace.ca/handle/10613/9290
Description
Summary:This project was supported by the Government of Canada through a SSHRC Connection Grant. The authors acknowledge the contributions of Lauren Brown, Director, Janet Rigg, Mental Health and Wellness Counsellor, and Waneeta Richardson, First Nations Health Authority, in leading the background work on which this project is based. We also acknowledge Elders Diane Brown, Betty Richardson, Isabel Brillon, Kay Watson, and Pete Thompson, and Cindy Williams, community member, in contributing to the dialogue that led to this project. A previous Planning and Dissemination Grant from the CIHR enabled the project plan to be developed, which formed the basis of the proposal for this project. : This project was supported by the Government of Canada through a SSHRC Connection Grant, and builds on a previous project supported by a CIHR Planning and Dissemination Grant. The first project was focused on developing Indigenous leadership through facilitating collaboration between First Nations and Indigenous peoples and regional health authorities in British Columbia. A detailed report is available (Hartney, 2018). Through the previous project, and earlier work conducted by members of the project team in Haida Gwaii, this project was conceived. A series of Elders dinners had been held in the community, to facilitate the leadership of Elders in mental health services in the Skidegate community. This project expands on the successful approach used previously, by bringing together Elders from the ten clans of the Haida Nation, with leadership from Northern Heath Authority, with the intention to build trusting relationships. The project will support Indigenous talent and research careers by employing a knowledge keeper from within the community, and engaging with Elders as project participants, thereby demonstrating their strengths as advisors to the health authority. The data collection method used will be talking circles. The work will further develop the Indigenous research career of the Health Director, Lauren Brown, building on her masters research developing a model of Haida governance for the health centre. The project is focused on engaging Indigenous knowledge through involving Elders in talking circles. The activities of the project will directly address the barriers which exist for Elders to have input into the health system, specifically, the remoteness of Haida Gwaii, and the lack of opportunity for relationship building at the senior leadership level. It will directly address the perceived lack of engagement from the health authority in the lives of the Haida people, though engaging in relationship building in a culturally appropriate way. We are mobilizing knowledge and partnerships for reconciliation through building on the past relationships between the Haida Nation and Royal Roads University, and developing and strengthening the partnership between the Health Centre, known as Xaaynangaa Naay (House of Life), in Skidegate, Haida Gwaii, with the Northern Health Authority. This will be facilitated by the First Nations Health Authority, who have strong relationships with all partners. The central concept of the project is to foster mutually respectful relationships, particularly between senior leadership in Northern Health Authority, and the Skidegate Elders. Using our own collaborative partnerships between Indigenous leaders and non-Indigenous allies, we are creating a safe, trauma-informed space for the leadership of Elders to be recognized and respected. As an Ownership, Control, Access and Possession (OCAP)-compliant project, knowledge will be generated, gathered, analyzed, and retained in the Skidegate community in Haida Gwaii.