Analysis
Improving health research among Indigenous Peoples in Canada
Sarah Hyett, Stacey Marjerrison and Chelsea Gabel
CMAJ May 22, 2018 190 (20) E616-E621; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1503/cmaj.171538
Sarah Hyett
Departments of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact (Hyett) and Pediatrics (Marjerrison), McMaster University; McMaster Children’s Hospital (Marjerrison); McMaster Indigenous Research Institute and Faculty of Social Sciences (Gabel), McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont.
MScStacey Marjerrison
Departments of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact (Hyett) and Pediatrics (Marjerrison), McMaster University; McMaster Children’s Hospital (Marjerrison); McMaster Indigenous Research Institute and Faculty of Social Sciences (Gabel), McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont.
MD MScChelsea Gabel
Departments of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact (Hyett) and Pediatrics (Marjerrison), McMaster University; McMaster Children’s Hospital (Marjerrison); McMaster Indigenous Research Institute and Faculty of Social Sciences (Gabel), McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont.
PhD
Submit a Response to This Article
Jump to comment:
No Responses have been published for this article.
In this issue
Podcast
Article tools
Improving health research among Indigenous Peoples in Canada
Sarah Hyett, Stacey Marjerrison, Chelsea Gabel
CMAJ May 2018, 190 (20) E616-E621; DOI: 10.1503/cmaj.171538
Jump to section
- Article
- How has the history of Indigenous health research in Canada shaped current governance?
- Why are Indigenous ways of knowing resisted?
- Which research methodologies have been used successfully in Indigenous health research?
- What can be used to avoid “deficit discourses” when undertaking Indigenous health research?
- How can non-Indigenous health researchers act as allies to Indigenous Peoples?
- Conclusion
- Footnotes
- References
- Figures & Tables
- Related Content
- Responses
- Metrics
Related Articles
Cited By...
- Disparities in primary and emergency health care among "off-reserve" Indigenous females compared with non-Indigenous females aged 15-55 years in Canada
- Nouveau guide du JAMC sur la declaration de la race et de lethnie dans les articles de recherche
- Examining the experiences of Indigenous families seeking health information about caring for sick or injured children: a scoping review
- CMAJs new guidance on the reporting of race and ethnicity in research articles
- Community engagement approaches for Indigenous health research: recommendations based on an integrative review
- Defining global health as public health somewhere else