Self-determination in Health Care: A Multiple Case Study of Four First Nations Communities in Canada

The perceived level of self-determination in health care in four First Nations communities in Canada is examined through a multiple case study approach. Twenty-three participants from federal, provincial and First Nations governments as well as health care professionals in the communities of Blood T...

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Main Author: Mashford-Pringle, Angela Rose
Other Authors: Young, T. Kue, Dalla Lana School of Public Health
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published:
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/35898
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spelling ftunivtoronto:oai:localhost:1807/35898 2023-05-15T16:14:06+02:00 Self-determination in Health Care: A Multiple Case Study of Four First Nations Communities in Canada Mashford-Pringle, Angela Rose Young, T. Kue Dalla Lana School of Public Health NO_RESTRICTION http://hdl.handle.net/1807/35898 en_ca eng http://hdl.handle.net/1807/35898 First Nations public health Aboriginal health care policy Canada self government self determination 0573 0769 Thesis ftunivtoronto 2020-06-17T11:24:17Z The perceived level of self-determination in health care in four First Nations communities in Canada is examined through a multiple case study approach. Twenty-three participants from federal, provincial and First Nations governments as well as health care professionals in the communities of Blood Tribe, Lac La Ronge, Garden Hill and Wasagamack First Nations provided insight into the diversity of perception of self-determination in First Nations health care. The difference in definition between Aboriginal and the federal and provincial governments is a factor in the varying perceptions of the level of control First Nations communities have over their health care system. Participants from the four First Nations communities perceived their level of self-determination over their health care system to be much lower than the level perceived by provincial and federal government participants. The organization and delivery of health care is based on the location of the community, the availability of the human resources, the level of communication, the amount of community resources, and the ability to self-manage. The socio-political history including impact of contact, residential schools, and integration of Aboriginal worldview are factors in the organization and delivery of health care as well as the perceived level of self-determination that the community sees. The duration and intensity of contact influences how health care is organized as the communities become more familiarized with the biomedical model that most Canadians use. Having a holistic health care system that includes acknowledging the socio-political history, culture, language, worldview and traditional medicines is important to the four First Nations communities, but this has not been fully embraced in any of the communities. Despite their differences, all four communities are working toward self-determination that hopefully would result in an ‘ideal’ First Nations health care system which is holistic, cultural, spiritual, and interdisciplinary and ultimately lead to full management of the health care system. PhD Thesis First Nations University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space
op_collection_id ftunivtoronto
language English
topic First Nations
public health
Aboriginal
health care policy
Canada
self government
self determination
0573
0769
spellingShingle First Nations
public health
Aboriginal
health care policy
Canada
self government
self determination
0573
0769
Mashford-Pringle, Angela Rose
Self-determination in Health Care: A Multiple Case Study of Four First Nations Communities in Canada
topic_facet First Nations
public health
Aboriginal
health care policy
Canada
self government
self determination
0573
0769
description The perceived level of self-determination in health care in four First Nations communities in Canada is examined through a multiple case study approach. Twenty-three participants from federal, provincial and First Nations governments as well as health care professionals in the communities of Blood Tribe, Lac La Ronge, Garden Hill and Wasagamack First Nations provided insight into the diversity of perception of self-determination in First Nations health care. The difference in definition between Aboriginal and the federal and provincial governments is a factor in the varying perceptions of the level of control First Nations communities have over their health care system. Participants from the four First Nations communities perceived their level of self-determination over their health care system to be much lower than the level perceived by provincial and federal government participants. The organization and delivery of health care is based on the location of the community, the availability of the human resources, the level of communication, the amount of community resources, and the ability to self-manage. The socio-political history including impact of contact, residential schools, and integration of Aboriginal worldview are factors in the organization and delivery of health care as well as the perceived level of self-determination that the community sees. The duration and intensity of contact influences how health care is organized as the communities become more familiarized with the biomedical model that most Canadians use. Having a holistic health care system that includes acknowledging the socio-political history, culture, language, worldview and traditional medicines is important to the four First Nations communities, but this has not been fully embraced in any of the communities. Despite their differences, all four communities are working toward self-determination that hopefully would result in an ‘ideal’ First Nations health care system which is holistic, cultural, spiritual, and interdisciplinary and ultimately lead to full management of the health care system. PhD
author2 Young, T. Kue
Dalla Lana School of Public Health
format Thesis
author Mashford-Pringle, Angela Rose
author_facet Mashford-Pringle, Angela Rose
author_sort Mashford-Pringle, Angela Rose
title Self-determination in Health Care: A Multiple Case Study of Four First Nations Communities in Canada
title_short Self-determination in Health Care: A Multiple Case Study of Four First Nations Communities in Canada
title_full Self-determination in Health Care: A Multiple Case Study of Four First Nations Communities in Canada
title_fullStr Self-determination in Health Care: A Multiple Case Study of Four First Nations Communities in Canada
title_full_unstemmed Self-determination in Health Care: A Multiple Case Study of Four First Nations Communities in Canada
title_sort self-determination in health care: a multiple case study of four first nations communities in canada
publishDate
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/35898
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1807/35898
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