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Indigenous Health Promotion - Coggle Diagram
Indigenous Health Promotion
Indigenous people are not a single, monolithic group.
1b. Successful health promotion takes Indigenous similarities and distinctions into account, in order to provide appropriate and culturally competent care to Indigenous peoples.
1c. An essential component of de-colonizing health promotion is including Indigenous communities in the creation and implementation of (relevant) programs and initiatives.
1a. Indigenous peoples are diverse and have diverse histories, cultures, geographic locations, and needs.
5. As there are limits to the life-sustaining resources earth can provide us, we must actively address the growing risk of exceeding earth's carrying capacity
5b. Indigenous values that focus on maintaining positive human relations with the natural world, serve as a powerful approach to addressing this issue.
5c. Learning from and amplifying the voices of Indigenous individuals will result in restoring Indigenous control and sustainable health promotion and planetary health.
5a. Growing environmental concerns of depleted resources, climate change, pollution etc. will continue to negatively impact the world population.
3. COVID-19 has disproportionally impacted Indigenous populations
3c. This pandemic highlighted the importance of implementing health services and programs that take into account the social vulnerabilities faced by marginalized populations.
3b. Indigenous individuals are amongst the many marginalized groups that had difficulties obtaining testing and treatment, and inability to effectively comply to prevention strategies such as social distancing, frequent hand-washing, and sanitation.
3a. Health inequities existed prior to this pandemic, however Covid-19 exacerbated this issue and garnered more worldwide attention.
2. Documentaries serve as an effective research practice.
2b. This innovative style of research allows for the incorporation of creativity, which may be more enticing for people to learn from.
2c. To ensure that data is of good quality, extra steps must be taken to assess for things such as credibility of participants, transferability of data, and practical implications for data collected.
2a. It effectively shares the lived experiences and stories of people, which provides valuable context that is relevant to health promotion.
4. Restoring control to Indigenous communities is absolutely necessary for effective health promotion
4b. By encouraging collaboration, this ensures that health promotion is undertaken in a respectful, relevant, reciprocal, and culturally appropriate manner which is beneficial to all.
4c. As demonstrated by the project conducted by M’Wikwedong Indigenous Friendship Centre, Indigenous youth hold valuable knowledge and ideas that can be utilized to benefit their communities and future generations.
4a. Indigenous communities are able to offer unique approaches to health promotion that incorporate ancestral knowledge and spiritual practices.