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Int J Equity Health · May 2021
ReviewIntegrating equity and social justice for indigenous peoples in undergraduate health professions education in Canada: a framework from a critical review of literature.
- Amélie Blanchet Garneau, Marilou Bélisle, Patrick Lavoie, and Catherine Laurent Sédillot.
- Faculty of Nursing, Université de Montréal, 2375, chemin de la Côte-Sainte-Catherine, Montreal, Quebec, H3T 1A8, Canada. amelie.blanchet.garneau@umontreal.ca.
- Int J Equity Health. 2021 May 21; 20 (1): 123.
AbstractUnderstanding how to create structural change by actively counteracting racialized ways of interacting with Indigenous peoples at an individual and organizational level within health care systems and health professions education is essential for creating a more inclusive, equitable, and healthier society. In health professions education, the primary means of teaching about health inequities has been to frame them as stemming from culturally or ethnically based issues. While attention to culturally specific practices can be valuable to health and healing in some contexts, education that solely focuses on Indigenous cultures risks perpetuating cultural stereotypes and othering, rather than focusing on how Eurocentric systems continue to exert oppressive effects on Indigenous peoples. We present an organizational transformation framework grounded in equitable partnerships from a comprehensive critical review of the literature on the integration of equity and social justice in undergraduate health professions education with a focus on Indigenous health. We did a thematic analysis of the results and discussions presented in the 26 selected articles to identify promising practices and challenges associated with the integration of equity and social justice in undergraduate health professions education. The framework resulting from this analysis is composed of three interrelated components: 1) adopt critical pedagogical approaches that promote Indigenous epistemologies; 2) partner with Indigenous students, educators and communities; 3) engage educators in critical pedagogical approaches and health equity issues. This framework could guide the development of contextually tailored interventions that contribute to decolonizing health professions education.
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