New funding in support of NCCIH’s cultural safety resource collection
Cultural Safety and Respectful Relationships
Cultural safety is a response to systemic and structural barriers and health inequities that have affected access to and quality of health care provided to First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples. First introduced into nursing education and practice in New Zealand, cultural safety seeks to address health inequities experienced by Indigenous peoples within all health care interactions and embodies principles of cultural humility, competency, and awareness.
Touted as a best practice, this model of care values and empowers minority and marginalized clients, including First Nation, Inuit, and Métis clients, and works to disrupt power imbalances and deeply held biases, attitudes, and practices expressed by health care providers to ensure a safe environment. It responds to the unique needs of clients by incorporating respect for their cultural traditions and identities, and accounting for the systemic and structural barriers that affect their access to and quality of care received. A culturally safe environment leads to respectful communication and patient-provider interactions, and ultimately better health outcomes for First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples. An environment is perceived as culturally safe environment by patients and clients, not practitioners and managers.
While originally conceptualized as a decolonizing model of practice and policy for Indigenous populations in a health care setting, the concept has since expanded to encompass other marginalized populations who may experience barriers to care, including those based on ethnicity, age, sexual orientation, religious beliefs, gender, and (dis)abilities. It has also expanded to other settings beyond the health sector where marginalized individuals may encounter racism or discrimination, including education, social work, employment, justice, corrections, and others.
To varying degrees, initiatives are being implemented across Canada and diverse sectors to ensure First Nations, Inuit, and Métis individuals experience cultural safety when interacting with mainstream systems. The NCCIH has prioritized cultural safety and respectful relationships as one of its key pillars, with a wide range of resources intended to enhance the capacity of practitioners, policy makers, and decision-makers to provide anti-racist, respectful, and culturally safe services.
New funding in support of NCCIH’s cultural safety resource collection
August 2021
The National Collaborating Centre for Indigenous Health (NCCIH) is pleased to announce that it will be receiving a total of $1,07 million in new public funding from Indigenous Services Canada (ISC) and the B.C. government to grow the first-ever collection of cultural safety and Indigenous-specific anti-racism tools and resources.
The NCCIH Cultural Safety Collection is an online library that includes videos, communication tools, research papers, training materials and educational platforms. These resources are intended to be of use to broad audiences, including health practitioners, health administrators and decision makers.
“This project will go a long way toward addressing the issue of Indigenous-specific racism in our health system, but can also serve as an important model and training opportunity for the rest of Canada” says B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix.
For his part, federal Minister of Indigenous Services Marc Miller congratulated the NCCIH for its leadership in creating this “much-needed” repository, adding that “First Nations, Inuit, and Métis have the right to be served by a first-class health-care system without fear of discrimination or racism, no matter where they live.”
The Cultural Safety Collection is one of several collections in NCCIH’s Resource Library. All collections are searchable by health topic, subject or keyword, publication type, and year published, and contain resources related specifically to the health of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis populations in Canada.
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