Culture & Health Among First Nations in Canada

Current health inequities amongst First Nations peoples are frequently attributed to various historical and ongoing effects of colonization. While some evidence suggests that certain aspects of First Nations cultural identity might protect against poor health outcomes often worsened through experien...

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Main Author: Paul, Jocelyn Marie
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Supporting Aboriginal Graduate Enhancement 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.lib.sfu.ca/index.php/igss/article/view/6229
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spelling ftsimonfrazerudp:oai:ojs.journals.lib.sfu.ca:article/6229 2023-10-29T02:36:18+01:00 Culture & Health Among First Nations in Canada Paul, Jocelyn Marie 2023-09-29 application/pdf https://journals.lib.sfu.ca/index.php/igss/article/view/6229 eng eng Supporting Aboriginal Graduate Enhancement https://journals.lib.sfu.ca/index.php/igss/article/view/6229/5493 https://journals.lib.sfu.ca/index.php/igss/article/view/6229 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0 Indigenous Graduate Student Symposium Journal; Vol. 2 No. 1 (2022): Indigenous Empowerment and Resurgence Social determinants of health Culture Distress Social stressors First Nations info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2023 ftsimonfrazerudp 2023-10-01T17:42:05Z Current health inequities amongst First Nations peoples are frequently attributed to various historical and ongoing effects of colonization. While some evidence suggests that certain aspects of First Nations cultural identity might protect against poor health outcomes often worsened through experiencing social stress, inconsistent evidence and minimal research in this regard has explored these links among First Nations peoples in Canada. That said, the current objectives of the study were to better understand what types of social stressors (e.g., bullying, cyberbullying) worsen levels of (psychological) distress and which cultural factors seem to be linked to reduced distress and/or moderate (protect) against unwanted impacts of particular social stressors on levels of distress. Secondary analyses (e.g., see Paul, McQuaid, Hopkins, Perri, Stewart, Matheson, Anisman, & Bombay, 2023 [manuscript titled “Relations between bullying and distress among youth living in First Nations communities: Assessing direct and moderating effects of culture-related variables” in an upcoming special issue of the Journal of Transcultural Psychiatry]) were performed using the First Nations Regional Health Survey 2015/16 youth data. Overall, bullying and cyberbullying were associated with increased distress. Strong feelings of community belonging were directly associated with lower distress and buffered the relationships between bullying/cyberbullying and distress. Among youth who experienced cyberbullying, those who participated in community cultural events at least sometimes reported lower distress compared to those who rarely or never participated. These secondary analyses highlight the importance of certain culture-related variables as key factors associated with the well-being of youth living in First Nations communities across Canada. The full manuscript (e.g., see Paul, McQuaid, Hopkins, Perri, Stewart, Matheson, Anisman, & Bombay, 2023 [manuscript titled “Relations between bullying and distress among youth living in ... Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations SFU Library Digital Publishing (Simon Fraser University, Vancouver)
institution Open Polar
collection SFU Library Digital Publishing (Simon Fraser University, Vancouver)
op_collection_id ftsimonfrazerudp
language English
topic Social determinants of health
Culture
Distress
Social stressors
First Nations
spellingShingle Social determinants of health
Culture
Distress
Social stressors
First Nations
Paul, Jocelyn Marie
Culture & Health Among First Nations in Canada
topic_facet Social determinants of health
Culture
Distress
Social stressors
First Nations
description Current health inequities amongst First Nations peoples are frequently attributed to various historical and ongoing effects of colonization. While some evidence suggests that certain aspects of First Nations cultural identity might protect against poor health outcomes often worsened through experiencing social stress, inconsistent evidence and minimal research in this regard has explored these links among First Nations peoples in Canada. That said, the current objectives of the study were to better understand what types of social stressors (e.g., bullying, cyberbullying) worsen levels of (psychological) distress and which cultural factors seem to be linked to reduced distress and/or moderate (protect) against unwanted impacts of particular social stressors on levels of distress. Secondary analyses (e.g., see Paul, McQuaid, Hopkins, Perri, Stewart, Matheson, Anisman, & Bombay, 2023 [manuscript titled “Relations between bullying and distress among youth living in First Nations communities: Assessing direct and moderating effects of culture-related variables” in an upcoming special issue of the Journal of Transcultural Psychiatry]) were performed using the First Nations Regional Health Survey 2015/16 youth data. Overall, bullying and cyberbullying were associated with increased distress. Strong feelings of community belonging were directly associated with lower distress and buffered the relationships between bullying/cyberbullying and distress. Among youth who experienced cyberbullying, those who participated in community cultural events at least sometimes reported lower distress compared to those who rarely or never participated. These secondary analyses highlight the importance of certain culture-related variables as key factors associated with the well-being of youth living in First Nations communities across Canada. The full manuscript (e.g., see Paul, McQuaid, Hopkins, Perri, Stewart, Matheson, Anisman, & Bombay, 2023 [manuscript titled “Relations between bullying and distress among youth living in ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Paul, Jocelyn Marie
author_facet Paul, Jocelyn Marie
author_sort Paul, Jocelyn Marie
title Culture & Health Among First Nations in Canada
title_short Culture & Health Among First Nations in Canada
title_full Culture & Health Among First Nations in Canada
title_fullStr Culture & Health Among First Nations in Canada
title_full_unstemmed Culture & Health Among First Nations in Canada
title_sort culture & health among first nations in canada
publisher Supporting Aboriginal Graduate Enhancement
publishDate 2023
url https://journals.lib.sfu.ca/index.php/igss/article/view/6229
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Indigenous Graduate Student Symposium Journal; Vol. 2 No. 1 (2022): Indigenous Empowerment and Resurgence
op_relation https://journals.lib.sfu.ca/index.php/igss/article/view/6229/5493
https://journals.lib.sfu.ca/index.php/igss/article/view/6229
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0
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