• Health policy · Jun 2018

    Advancing Indigenous primary health care policy in Alberta, Canada.

    • Rita Henderson, Stephanie Montesanti, Lindsay Crowshoe, and Charles Leduc.
    • Department of Family Medicine, University of Calgary, Canada; Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Canada; O'Brien Institute for Public Health, University of Calgary, Canada. Electronic address: rihender@ucalgary.ca.
    • Health Policy. 2018 Jun 1; 122 (6): 638-644.

    AbstractFor Indigenous people worldwide, accessing Primary Health Care (PHC) services responsive to socio-cultural realities is challenging, with institutional inequities in healthcare and jurisdictional barriers encumbering patients, providers, and decision-makers. In the Canadian province of Alberta, appropriate Indigenous health promotion, disease prevention, and primary care health services are needed, though policy reform is hindered by complex networks and competing interests between: federal/provincial funders; reserve/urban contexts; medical/allied health professional priorities; and three Treaty territories each structuring fiduciary responsibilities of the Canadian government. In 2015, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) of Canada released a final report from over six years spent considering impacts of the country's history of Indian residential schools, which for more than a century forcibly removed thousands of children from their families and communities. The TRC directed 94 calls to action to all levels of society, including health systems, to address an historical legacy of cultural assimilationism against Indigenous peoples. To address TRC calls that Indigenous health disparities be recognized as resulting from previous government policies, and to integrate Indigenous leadership and perspectives into health systems, PHC decision-makers, practitioners, and scholars in the province of Alberta brought together stakeholders from across Canada. The gathering detailed here explored Indigenous PHC models from other Canadian provinces to collaboratively build relationships for policy reform and identify opportunities for PHC innovations within Alberta.Copyright © 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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