Times Colonist

Taking action toward reconcilia­tion at Island Health

- LEAH HOLLINS A commentary by the chair of Island Health’s board of directors.

As a former nurse, a health-care leader and the chair of Island Health’s board of directors, a question which has always guided my work has been: “Is what I am doing right for the patient?”

This simple question has helped guide my decisions to be in the best interests of the people we have the privilege to serve within our publicly funded health-care system. The basic values of fairness and equity of access are at the centre of this system, yet we continue to see Indigenous-specific racism and discrimina­tion reported again and again.

In December 2020, Island Health along with all other B.C. health authoritie­s committed to implementi­ng the recommenda­tions from the In Plain Sight: Addressing Indigenous-Specific Racism report while we also extended and apology to the generation­s of Indigenous People who experience­d harm in accessing health services.

As I reflect on the report, I also recognize people are the most vulnerable when they are accessing health care and we have a responsibi­lity to change.

The horrifying confirmati­on of mass graves at several former residentia­l schools deepened my resolve, and the board’s resolve, to ensure we address racism and create safe spaces for patients, families and care providers.

In the region we serve, there were more than five residentia­l schools, as well as the Nanaimo Indian hospital — this is the lived experience of the people in our communitie­s.

Island Health is committed to providing a culturally safe organizati­on for those who are accessing, delivering or supporting the delivery of health and care. There have been multiple reports, inquiries and testimonia­ls shared about residentia­l schools outlining specific actions we can take as an organizati­on.

This includes the Calls to Action from the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, the B.C. Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act and the actions outlined in the In Plain Sight report.

At Island Health, we have committed to these changes because we know we can no longer read reports and make commitment­s to change — we must act on those commitment­s and create change with visible actions creating systemic and lasting changes.

This is why at Island Health, we are delivering an Indigenous­specific action plan, created in partnershi­p and guided by community.

This plan includes actions to ensure safe access to care for Indigenous people and supporting Indigenous staff and clinical staff within our health system.

It is also why the board of directors has unanimousl­y supported the removal of the name Begbie from the building at 2101 Richmond Ave. on the Royal Jubilee Hospital site in consultati­on with Songhees and Esquimalt First Nations, and the First Nations Health Authority.

Words matter, and for Indigenous People place names are often associated with stories. The story of Matthew Begbie, B.C.’s first chief justice, is a story of a judge who wrongly convicted and hanged five Tsilhqot’in Nation chiefs near Quesnel in 1864, and a sixth chief a year later.

The B.C. government apologized for the executions in 1993 and the chiefs were fully exonerated with an apology from the premier in 2014 and the prime minister in 2018.

Begbie’s actions do not align with our organizati­onal values nor tell the story of the building, which was a residence for the School of Nursing.

Instead it is a painful reminder of the layers of trauma

Indigenous people continue to experience embedded within our systems.

For Island Health, this action represents a visible change as we undertake a systemic review of our programs, building names and other areas within Island Health to support Indigenous people in feeling safe when accessing our services and sites, and our Indigenous staff having a supportive environmen­t in which to work.

In the coming weeks and months, we will engage with staff, medical staff and Indigenous partners as we look to renaming the building, to express its story of the caring and compassion­ate nurses — a story that aligns with our organizati­onal values.

I acknowledg­e and am grateful to the Lekwungen peoples of the Songhees and Esquimalt First Nations on whose traditiona­l territory I live. I also acknowledg­e my history and my responsibi­lity for reconcilia­tion.

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