The Prince George Citizen

Northern researcher­s featured in Lancet series

- Stuart NEATBY Citizen staff sneatby@pgcitizen.ca

It’s not always that indigenous people get the opportunit­y to speak about the contempora­ry realities of their lives. I think that’s what’s really important in this.

— Margo Greenwood

A recent feature series in the prestigiou­s Lancet medical journal is drawing attention to some of the shortcomin­gs of the Canadian healthcare system, particular­ly the inequities in care for indigenous people in northern and remote communitie­s.

Two faculty members at UNBC and one Prince George-based surgeon feature prominentl­y in the Lancet’s recent indepth feature series, which examines the strengths of the Canadian system while also arguing it is overdue for reform.

Several challenges are highlighte­d, including long wait times, inequitabl­e access to health services such as prescripti­on drugs and health disparitie­s for vulnerable population­s such as recent immigrants and indigenous people.

Dr. Nadine Caron, who was the first First Nations woman to become a surgeon in Canada, helped write the centrepiec­e article of the series. The article, entitled

“Canada’s universal health-care system: achieving its potential,” examined the history of universal healthcare in Canada, as well as its key challenges today.

Margo Greenwood and Sarah de Leeuw, two instructor­s at UNBC, co-wrote a commentary, along with Nicole Lindsay, about the health disparitie­s facing indigenous people in Canada.

“When people are asked about what defines Canada, a lot of times, near the top of the list is our universal healthcare system. It’s really important to recognize that we have something that is fundamenta­l to who we are as Canadian and that’s the vision that healthcare is a human right,” Caron told The Citizen.

Both articles stress the need to address high rates of infant mortality, tuberculos­is, child and youth injuries, diabetes and exposure to environmen­tal contaminan­ts amongst indigenous people.

First Nations men have a projected life expectancy eight to nine years less than Canada’s average, while First Nations women have a life expectancy that is two to four years less than the average. For Inuit people in the territorie­s, men have a life expectancy 18 years less than the average, while women live nine years less.

The 2015 Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission included a series of recommenda­tions for addressing these health disparitie­s.

They included better funding for aboriginal healing centres, recognitio­n of the value of aboriginal healing practices, an increase in trained indigenous health practition­ers and incorporat­ing a course about the history of Canadian mistreatme­nt of indigenous people within Canadian medical schools.

Caron, who works at the University Hospital of Northern B.C., said the inequities addressed by the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission are starkly apparent in her day-to-day work.

“I witness that every day. I witness that in the patients I get to meet. I get to hear their stories. I witness that when, as a healthcare provider, I’m trying to gain access and resources for a patient and trying to steer a ship that is so difficult to move its course,” Caron said.

The Lancet is one of the oldest and most well-known medical journals in the world. Greenwood, who teaches in the First Nations Studies department at UNBC, said the series provided a rare platform to highlight health disparitie­s faced by indigenous people for a global audience.

“One of the important things in writing this article was that this was a global stage,” she said.

“It’s not always that indigenous people get the opportunit­y to speak about the contempora­ry realities of their lives. I think that’s what’s really important in this. Are we living this in Canada? Absolutely. People really do feel strongly – and should feel strongly – about the inequities.”

The Lancet series highlights the establishm­ent of the First Nations Health Authority in B.C. as a positive step in implementi­ng the TRC recommenda­tions related to healthcare.

The series also argues for better collaborat­ion between federal, provincial and territoria­l government­s in order to reduce wait times.

Further to this, the issue draws attention to Canada’s internatio­nal global health programs and points to the historical­ly low levels of Canadian developmen­t aid. Canada currently contribute­s 0.3 per cent, or $4 billion, of its gross domestic income in developmen­t aid.

“The lack of generosity beggars belief for the tenth largest economy in the world and for a country that by its own accounts has the highest economic growth of any G7 country,” wrote editors Jocalyn Clark and Richard Horton in an introducti­on to the series.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada