A drowning prevention policy framework

In this work, I demonstrate the novel application of the “ʈiič-mɑɫ-ɴi” (living and surviving with water) teaching to a practical challenge, at this time, there is no drowning prevention policy in Canada. Through a narrative-research-design, I conducted sixteen research interviews with aquatic profes...

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Main Author: Francis, Emily
Other Authors: Beerman, Stephen
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://viurrspace.ca/handle/10613/27503
https://doi.org/10.25316/IR-19179
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spelling ftviurr:oai:viurrspace.ca:10613/27503 2023-10-09T21:51:33+02:00 A drowning prevention policy framework Francis, Emily Beerman, Stephen 2023-09-14 application/pdf https://viurrspace.ca/handle/10613/27503 https://doi.org/10.25316/IR-19179 en eng https://viurrspace.ca/handle/10613/27503 http://dx.doi.org/10.25316/IR-19179 2023 ftviurr https://doi.org/10.25316/IR-19179 2023-09-23T22:12:44Z In this work, I demonstrate the novel application of the “ʈiič-mɑɫ-ɴi” (living and surviving with water) teaching to a practical challenge, at this time, there is no drowning prevention policy in Canada. Through a narrative-research-design, I conducted sixteen research interviews with aquatic professionals, Indigenous community members who live in aquatic contexts, and people working within Indigenous-health-leadership (2021-09-20 to 2022-08-04). The primary exploratory research question is, “How can First Nations or Indigenous populations or communities be supported in the areas of injury and drowning prevention programming?”. This work resulted in eight principles. 1. Colonization is a probable contributor to the inequity in drowning mortality. 2. Historical relationships with water have been disrupted by colonization, segregation, geographic relocation, poverty of opportunity, socioeconomic inequity, cultural barriers, racism, and lateral aggressions. 3. Community needs assessments and lived experiences and data should inform prevention efforts. 4. Community members should be leaders, teachers, and facilitators. 5. Measures of success should be determined by the community. 6. Community skill building, resilience, safety recreation and emergency response may be considered key objectives. 7. Mutual respect building with the 5 elements teaching, and community-members should be core values. 8. Address unintentional injury (drowning) as a public-health issue and a specific cause of death in First Nations communities causing excess mortality. The author shall continue to consult with multi-sectorial stakeholders to address real-world gaps in knowledge and priority areas that inform a drowning prevention policy framework. Other/Unknown Material First Nations VIURRSpace (Royal Roads University and Vancouver Island University) Canada
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collection VIURRSpace (Royal Roads University and Vancouver Island University)
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language English
description In this work, I demonstrate the novel application of the “ʈiič-mɑɫ-ɴi” (living and surviving with water) teaching to a practical challenge, at this time, there is no drowning prevention policy in Canada. Through a narrative-research-design, I conducted sixteen research interviews with aquatic professionals, Indigenous community members who live in aquatic contexts, and people working within Indigenous-health-leadership (2021-09-20 to 2022-08-04). The primary exploratory research question is, “How can First Nations or Indigenous populations or communities be supported in the areas of injury and drowning prevention programming?”. This work resulted in eight principles. 1. Colonization is a probable contributor to the inequity in drowning mortality. 2. Historical relationships with water have been disrupted by colonization, segregation, geographic relocation, poverty of opportunity, socioeconomic inequity, cultural barriers, racism, and lateral aggressions. 3. Community needs assessments and lived experiences and data should inform prevention efforts. 4. Community members should be leaders, teachers, and facilitators. 5. Measures of success should be determined by the community. 6. Community skill building, resilience, safety recreation and emergency response may be considered key objectives. 7. Mutual respect building with the 5 elements teaching, and community-members should be core values. 8. Address unintentional injury (drowning) as a public-health issue and a specific cause of death in First Nations communities causing excess mortality. The author shall continue to consult with multi-sectorial stakeholders to address real-world gaps in knowledge and priority areas that inform a drowning prevention policy framework.
author2 Beerman, Stephen
author Francis, Emily
spellingShingle Francis, Emily
A drowning prevention policy framework
author_facet Francis, Emily
author_sort Francis, Emily
title A drowning prevention policy framework
title_short A drowning prevention policy framework
title_full A drowning prevention policy framework
title_fullStr A drowning prevention policy framework
title_full_unstemmed A drowning prevention policy framework
title_sort drowning prevention policy framework
publishDate 2023
url https://viurrspace.ca/handle/10613/27503
https://doi.org/10.25316/IR-19179
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://viurrspace.ca/handle/10613/27503
http://dx.doi.org/10.25316/IR-19179
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25316/IR-19179
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