Health Research Policy and Systems (Jun 2022)

Health system learning with Indigenous communities: a study protocol for a two-eyed seeing review and multiple case study

  • Crystal Milligan,
  • Rosa Mantla,
  • Grace Blake,
  • John B. Zoe,
  • Tyanna Steinwand,
  • Sharla Greenland,
  • Susan Keats,
  • Sara Nash,
  • Kyla Kakfwi-Scott,
  • Georgina Veldhorst,
  • Angela Mashford-Pringle,
  • Suzanne Stewart,
  • Susan Chatwood,
  • Whitney Berta,
  • Mark J. Dobrow

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12961-022-00873-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background It is well documented that Canadian healthcare does not fully meet the health needs of First Nations, Inuit or Métis peoples. In 1996, the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples concluded that Indigenous peoples’ healthcare needs had to be met by strategies and systems that emerged from Indigenous worldviews and cultures. In 2015, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission also called on health organizations to learn from Indigenous “knowledges” and integrate Indigenous worldviews alongside biomedicine and other western ways of knowing. These calls have not yet been met. Meanwhile, the dynamic of organizational learning from knowledges and evidence within communities is poorly understood—particularly when learning is from communities whose ways of knowing differ from those of the organization. Through an exploration of organizational and health system learning, this study will explore how organizations learn from the Indigenous communities they serve and contribute to (re-)conceptualizing the learning organization and learning health system in a way that privileges Indigenous knowledges and ways of knowing. Methods This study will employ a two-eyed seeing literature review and embedded multiple case study. The review, based on Indigenous and western approaches to reviewing and synthesizing knowledges, will inform understanding of health system learning from different ways of knowing. The multiple case study will examine learning by three distinct government organizations in Northwest Territories, a jurisdiction in northern Canada, that have roles to support community health and wellness: Tłı̨chǫ Government, Gwich’in Tribal Council, and Government of Northwest Territories. Case study data will be collected via interviews, talking circles, and document analysis. A steering group, comprising Tłı̨chǫ and Gwich’in Elders and representatives from each of the three partner organizations, will guide all aspects of the project. Discussion Examining systems that create health disparities is an imperative for Canadian healthcare. In response, this study will help to identify and understand ways for organizations to learn from and respectfully apply knowledges and evidence held within Indigenous communities so that their health and wellness are supported. In this way, this study will help to guide health organizations in the listening and learning that is required to contribute to reconciliation in healthcare.

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