Abstract
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated disparities in poverty and illness for people in vulnerable circumstances in ethnocultural communities. We sought to understand the evolving impacts of COVID-19 on ethnocultural communities to inform intersectoral advocacy and community action.
METHODS: The Illuminate Project used participatory action research, with cultural health brokers as peer researchers, from Sept. 21 to Dec. 31, 2020, in Edmonton, Alberta. Twenty-one peer researchers collected narratives from members of ethnocultural communities and self-interpreted them as they entered the narratives into the SenseMaker platform, a mixed-method data collection tool. The entire research team analyzed real-time, aggregate, quantitative and qualitative data to identify emerging thematic domains, then visualized these domains with social network analysis.
RESULTS: Brokers serving diverse communities collected 773 narratives. Identified domains illuminate the evolving and entangled impacts of COVID-19 including the following: COVID-19 prevention and management; care of acute, chronic and serious illnesses other than COVID-19; maternal care; mental health and triggers of past trauma; financial insecurity; impact on children and youth and seniors; and legal concerns. We identified that community social capital and cultural brokering are key assets that facilitate access to formal health and social system supports.
INTERPRETATION: The Illuminate Project has illustrated the entangled, systemic issues that result in poor health among vulnerable members of ethnocultural communities, and the exacerbating effects of COVID-19, which also increased barriers to mitigation. Cultural brokering and community social capital are key supports for people during the COVID-19 pandemic. These findings can inform policy to reduce harm and support community resiliency.
Mahatma Gandhi observed that “the true measure of any society can be found in how it treats its most vulnerable members.” Ethnocultural communities, defined by their unique shared characteristics (e.g., cultural traditions, language, country of origin),1 face greater challenges and have higher rates of poverty and illness than the general Canadian population. Migration results in conditions that affect all social determinants of health and disproportionally affect health outcomes, herein referred to as vulnerable circumstances.2,3 The emergence of major outbreaks of SARS-CoV-2 infections in ethnocultural communities highlights both the vulnerable circumstances of these communities and the disparities they face in accessing high-quality, culturally appropriate information and support.4–7 Studies have shown substantial variation in deaths attributed to COVID-19 based on factors such as age, sex, ethnicity, length of time in Canada, income and education.8–11 However, given the well-known gap in reporting comprehensive COVID-19 data in relation to race and ethnicity, efforts to measure its impact are hampered.8–12 There is an urgent need to understand the evolving challenges of COVID-19 to inform action and public policy that can mitigate these challenges.
To understand evolving situations of complexity and crisis, sensemaking, defined as “a continuous process to establish situational awareness,”13 is a crucial undertaking.14 Using participatory action research,15–18 we sought to understand the evolving impacts of COVID-19 on ethnocultural communities to inform broader national efforts to migitate the impacts of COVID-19. Particularly, we sought to understand how the challenges of COVID-19 are entangled with contextual factors at multiple levels, how families and communities are leveraging strengths and social capital to adapt, and the role of cultural brokers in managing the crisis.
Methods
We report our mixed-methods study according to the Good Reporting of A Mixed Methods Study (GRAMMS) checklist.19
Setting and participants
Academic researchers from the University of Alberta partnered with the Multicultural Health Broker Cooperative (MCHB) in Edmonton, Alberta, operated by community health workers of immigrant and refugee backgrounds,20 to conduct a community-based15,17,18 and trauma-informed participatory action research17,21 project. For 23 years, the MCHB’s mission has been to support immigrant and refugee families to attain optimum health through health education, holistic family support, community development, and system advocacy. The MCHB has a history of advocacy to reduce health inequities. Collectively, the MCHB brokers speak 54 languages and serve more than 10 000 people from dozens of ethnolinguistic communities.
Cultural brokering20,22,23 is defined as “the act of bridging, linking, mediating between groups or persons of differing cultural backgrounds for the purpose of reducing conflict and producing change.”20 It is grounded in democratic governance, direct responsiveness and accountability, equity and social justice. Cultural brokers bridge cultural distance,20,24 which refers to differences in values, communication styles, experiences and social organization, rooted in culture. Brokers are embedded in ethnocultural immigrant and refugee communities and share lived experiences of migration, trauma and finding themselves in vulnerable conditions while building their lives in Canada. Thus, they possess a deep knowledge of culture, premigration context and postmigration stressors, as well as gender and power relations. Brokers work with people in vulnerable circumstances, and are ideally situated to capture nuanced, real-time observations of the lived reality of community members and the impact of COVID-19 on communities as peer researchers.
Peer researchers were invited by the executive director of the MCHB and project colead (Y.C.) using purposive sampling criteria, as shown in Appendix 1, available at www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.210131/tab-related-content. The demands of COVID-19 meant that about 20% of all brokers had capacity to take on this additional work. Peer researchers contributed to every phase of the project, including its inception and purpose, instrument design, data collection and analysis, weekly sensemaking sessions, policy suggestions, and manuscript writing and revision.
Study design and theoretical considerations
To address the interconnected research purposes of understanding a complex problem and informing action for impact,25 we used a partnership-based, integrated, mixed-methods approach26 with an action research design.27 We captured real-time data to inform ongoing group reflection and understanding, or “sensemaking.” Sensemaking, informed by the Cynefin framework,28 is emerging as a pragmatic and participatory action research approach to study crises. The intent of this approach is to understand entangled, evolving phenomena to inform decision-making for action in complex spaces and to address complex problems.14,29,30 It is based on the notion that humans live in complex adaptive systems and make sense of the world using narrative.25,31 This approach starts with a concern identified by the community and involves collecting qualitative and quantitative evidence to achieve sufficient insight to support action. It has an exploratory focus on improving a situation, with subsequent cycles of data collection, analysis, and reflection. It embraces a collaborative and reflective relationship between participants and the researcher conducting activities, with an intent to improve social conditions..27
We were guided by the principles of community-based and trauma-informed participatory action research.15,17,18,21 Our data collection instrument and analysis drew upon the following concepts: syndemic theory,32–34 which acknowledges the aggravating effects of the interaction of 2 or more diseases within harmful social conditions; salutogenesis,35,36 which highlights manageability, meaningfulness and coherence (making sense of things) as vital to sustaining and fostering health within crisis; and resilience,37 a sociological concept focusing on mobilization of resources and shifting of risks. This approach uses narratives differently than traditional research based on narrative data,31,38,39 capturing data in the form of large numbers of micronarratives, rather than a small number of in-depth narratives.
Data collection and analysis
The project progressed in the following 3 phases: clarification of the purpose, collaboration and methods of the project; co-creation and refinement of the data collection tool; and iterative, real-time data collection and data analysis by the entire team during weekly meetings, illustrated in Figure 1.
In phase 1, we built upon an existing collaboration between the MCHB and the academic researchers. When the COVID-19 pandemic began, the MCHB rapidly identified emerging areas of crisis in the community that were not being perceived by the larger formal system (i.e., intentionally designed organizations or institutions, such as the health care, social care, justice or school systems) and highlighted the need to illuminate them. The research team immediately pivoted to support this need. The identified priority areas were COVID-19 infection prevention and management, food insecurity, family violence, mental health, triggers of past trauma, and care of conditions other than COVID-19, including maternal care, acute care, chronic illness care and serious illness care. We recognized that these issues were evolving and more likely emergent in the context of COVID-19.
In phase 2, peer and academic researchers codesigned a data collection tool using SenseMaker (Cognitive Edge), which supports the collection of narratives on smartphones or computers that are then analyzed using mixed methods.29 The tool is presented in detail in Appendix 2, available at www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.210131/tab-related-content. Our peer researchers captured short micronarratives from their lived experience of cultural brokering with families and communities between Sept. 21, 2020, and Dec. 31, 2020. In brief, a prompt is provided to elicit a micronarrative about something the peer researchers experienced in their work that relates to the priority areas or another pressing, emerging concern. They then self-interpret the narrative using the signifier sets created to categorize the narratives. This is referred to as “signification.” The signifier set includes ternary plots, or “triads,” and multiple-choice questions. The triads, informed by the project’s guiding theories, focused on what was affected (e.g., individual, family or community well-being), risks experienced, health-sustaining factors, resources for support and areas for improvement. We used the multiple-choice questions to categorize the responses by priority area, emotional tone, community, broker role employed, commonness, temporality, source and the degree to which peoples’ needs were met. Ultimately, the data are in the form of qualitative, narrative information, compositional data for the triads and categorical data for the multiple-choice questions. The entries take about 8 minutes to complete. Peer researchers were supported by the research team with technical questions and were adept at entry after a couple of narratives. They entered data in a mobile phone app or on a desktop computer interface. Data were stored securely on the Cognitive Edge SenseMaker servers.
In phase 3, we reviewed real-time, aggregate data on the SenseMaker Workbench, which generates visualizations of patterns found in the data, linked to the micronarratives, permitting both quantitative and qualitative exploration.40 The entire team, including the academic and peer researchers, met weekly for 90 minutes in a facilitated session to review and reflect on the patterns emerging in the data. We interrogated the data using the multiple-choice categories and clusters in the triads as filters, and by group discussion and reflection on the patterns (i.e., clusters and outliers) and associated narratives.41 In this phase, we integrated the quantitative and qualitative data collectively and iteratively. We took field notes to capture interpretations, emerging thematic domains and proposed actions. After 7 meetings, the entire group had achieved a shared understanding of the thematic domains, and the focus of the sensemaking sessions expanded to include suggestions for action. The action planning was guided by the question, “What are the actions that could be taken now at low cost, in the short term with modest investment, and over the longer term with more significant investment, that would make a meaningful difference for people?” Three sessions of intensive discussion, including bringing in a content expert on education, resulted in practical suggestions for policy and community action.
The narratives, signification and discussions showed an entanglement of issues, which were visualized using a nondirectional social network analysis (Fruchterman-Reingold algorithm), after deriving an adjacency matrix from the binary categorical variables coded for each of the 16 issues.42,43 Multiple issues and broker roles could be present within a single narrative. We conducted quantitative analyses using IBM SPSS Statistics Version 26.0 and R version 4.0.3.
Ethics approval
The project was approved by the University of Alberta Research Ethics Board (Pro00074666).
Results
Participating brokers and community leaders included 5 men and 16 women. Most participants had 10 or more years of brokering experience. Additional sociodemographic information is shared in Appendix 3, available at www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.210131/tab-related-content. Brokers collected and signified 773 micronarratives representing the lived experiences of people and families from diverse communities living in vulnerable circumstances in Edmonton, Alberta, between Sept. 21, 2020, and Dec. 31, 2020. These signified micronarratives are illustrated in several triads in Figure 2.
One-third of the narratives pertained directly to the prevention and management of COVID-19. They related to the well-being of individuals (19%), family (15%), and family and individuals (36%), and to a combination of individual, family and community well-being (26%) (Figure 2A). Figure 2B shows major clusters of actions by which risk was incurred. In the domain of prioritizing current needs (31% of the narratives), the entwining of COVID-19 with other areas of concern from the multiple-choice questions emphasized food insecurity, serious illness and chronic illness care, as well as family violence, mental health and triggers of past trauma. In the domain of needing to move (21%), the narratives strongly overlapped with multiple-choice domains of family violence, mental health and triggers of past trauma. Figure 2C shows that 40% of narratives emphasized the importance of being able to manage during the pandemic, followed by a balance of the ability to manage, the ability to make sense and to find meaning in the experience. Economic resources were the primary single resource needed (26%); a cluster of resources was balanced between economic, cultural and social connections (27%) (Figure 2D). Most support (41%) came from the MCHB or the MCHB, in concert with community or the formal system supports (Figure 2E). Figure 2F identifies the formal system as an area for improvement in 36% of narratives. A secondary cluster (21%) was balanced between the need for improvement in the formal system, family and community members, and the MCHB and natural leaders.
The entangled thematic areas are presented in a social network analysis (Figure 3). This analysis highlights mental health concerns and the economic consequences of the pandemic, which intensify needs and require more brokering capacity to help people navigate the system
The concerns of individuals and families are multifaceted, as shown in the results of the multiple-choice questions in Figure 4. In the group analysis sessions, exploration of these domains in the linked narrative data illustrated various evolving and entangled issues relating to peoples’ lived experience in the context of the pandemic, with the potential for multiple issues in one narrative. The 9 a priori areas of concern, identified by the peer researchers at the onset of the pandemic, were thus augmented with emerging domains, including legal concerns; the impact on children, youth and seniors; and a recognition that income insecurity is a core issue that is strongly associated with housing insecurity and food insecurity. Community social capital and cultural brokering that facilitated access to formal health and social system supports also emerged as thematic domains relating to how people were mitigating their areas of concern.
These domains were entangled in the narratives, as visualized in the social network analysis (Figure 3). This network view shows that entangled combinations of income, housing, food insecurity, COVID-19, mental health and family violence emerged more often in narratives than any other combination of domains identified.
Sensemaking results
The COVID-19 pandemic amplified disparities for people in vulnerable circumstances. Our participatory analysis showed the following 4 themes: increased intensity of peoples’ basic needs; increased time and skill for brokers to support families’ needs; increased effort and time to support communities’ understanding of COVID-19 prevention and management; and identifying and leveraging community strengths to build social capital within and between communities, as well as with formal systems, as a key strategy to build resilience. Table 1 and Table 2 provide representative narratives that illustrate the themes. Supplemental data are in Appendix 4, available at www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.210131/tab-related-content; examples are highlighted in the text.
Theme I. Increased intensity of needs
We identified that financial insecurity, precarious employment and job loss are core issues hampering COVID-19 prevention and management, and exacerbating its impact on families’ ability to meet basic needs. Requirements to isolate are more difficult to meet when income is tied to employment without paid sick time benefits, or with threats of job loss for missing work (Table 1, narrative 2). Quarantine is complicated by overcrowding in homes when extended or several families move in together given a lack of affordable housing or job loss (Table 1, narrative 1 and 3). The increased difficulty to meet basic needs and overcrowding is experienced as stress, and worsens problems with domestic violence and mental health.
Navigating health and social care services often requires interpretation and cultural brokering. Service delivery aimed at mitigating these needs is hampered by access barriers to the use of online services (e.g., ongoing requirements for signed consent in person for broker assistance). Remotely accessing these services exacerbates existing language and cultural barriers (Table 1, narrative 4). The lack of technology in the homes of many newcomers (Appendix 4, narrative 3) not only affects peoples’ access to online services, but also affects their children’s education as schools shift to online learning, with substantial effects on youth education and well-being. The data highlight serious challenges over this time period for youth of South Sudanese and Somali descent, including substance abuse, violence and death, as well as illustrating brokers’ efforts to connect with youth and identify meaningful supports (Table 1, narrative 5).
Theme II. Increased time and skills required to support families
Brokers and natural leaders in the community use a relational and holistic approach to help people manage their complex situations (Appendix 5, available at www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.210131/tab-related-content). The increased urgency and need of families for food, income support, housing and emergency quarantine support strains the resources of the brokers to manage their workloads (Table 1, narrative 3). The data show that initiatives such as the MCHB help make government support programs for COVID-19 work for people, fill the gaps in funding and support (Table 1, narrative 14; Appendix 4, narratives 3–6, 11), and advocate on the system and program levels to influence community and institutional responses to the systemic challenges of COVID-19.
Supporting virtual interactions with service agencies requires extensive efforts by brokers that are invisible to the formal system. The narratives show the intense support that brokers provide in navigating children’s services and disability supports (Appendix 4, narrative 8), the criminal justice system (Appendix 4, narrative 7), and the health system (Table 1, narrative 9). Pandemic support programs for income security, such as the Canada Emergency Response Benefit, are valued by communities, but changing regulations and processes make navigation challenging (Table 1, narrative 7). Seniors face substantial challenges with language and technology (Appendix 4, narratives 3, 5, 6).
Theme III. Increased time and resources to support community understanding of COVID-19 information and to manage impacts of the pandemic
Data highlight a high degree of misinformation within many communities because of language barriers and cultural distance in the way community members receive and understand information. Many narratives describe formal systems presenting barriers to accessing public services, and discussion in the group highlighted that this could exacerbate mistrust of formal systems among people who have had premigration trauma (Table 1, narratives 10–11). Fears of the repercussions of revealing positive tests or symptoms of SARS-CoV-2 infections to other community members affect contact tracing efforts. These repercussions include being blamed for passing on the disease to others, especially where there is death, stigma, and losing jobs that are temporary or “on call” if they have to isolate. Additionally, the widespread misinformation surrounding COVID-19 is amplified in ethnocultural communities, where inconsistent access to reputable information causes further mistrust and confusion (Table 1, narratives 11–14). The MCHB is working with health system partners to enhance community education and support (Appendix 4, narrative 11 and 12).
Theme IV. Identifying and leveraging community strengths and social capital within and between communities, as well as with formal systems, as a key strategy to build resilience
Narratives illustrate the strengths and the well-established communication networks within the communities (Table 2). They highlight the strong sense of community and solidarity, where members of the community are ready to give money, time and other resources to support each other in times of difficulty. The clusters of narratives in Figure 2E, positioned between MCHB and natural leaders, and both community and formal systems, point to the community development and intermediary roles of the MCHB. The data illustrate that identifying and leveraging community strengths to build social capital within and between communities, as well as with formal systems, has been a key strategy to mitigate isolation and mobilize support.
Discussion
In this study, we have illustrated the entangled impacts of COVID-19 on individuals and families living in vulnerable circumstances in ethnocultural communities in Edmonton. This increased understanding can inform action by the MCHB, the community and formal systems. Findings highlight the syndemic effect when COVID-19 intersects with pre-existing conditions in the context of socioeconomic inequities and structural barriers to accessing supports for these communities. Despite the communities’ use of resilience processes, such as mobilization of cultural, social, and economic resources, to support one another, families face disproportionate challenges in mitigating the social and economic impacts of COVID-19 and in accessing relevant information and formal support. A key finding is the impact COVID-19 has had in destabilizing the family unit, thereby increasing the time and resources needed to support families. Given the misalignment of formal system processes with the realities of people in vulnerable socioeconomic conditions, these challenges resulted in substantial access barriers to services and the vital need for cultural brokering. We were able to distill several practical suggestions to inform policy and action from our findings (Appendix 6, available at www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.210131/tab-related-content). We identified the need for supports for distancing and isolation requirements, adjustment of processes and documentation requirements for formal health and social care systems, employment security and support for labour market attachment, and actions to mitigate the pandemic’s impact on children and youth.
We also illustrated the importance of cultural brokers in bridging between people, communities and formal systems to build and sustain trusting relationships. Brokers possess deep knowledge of community strengths and risks, such as socioeconomic conditions that can create risk42 for increased infection and death. Others have also shown that cultural brokering can help to mitigate the impacts of COVID-19, providing people with the necessary resources to avert escalation of harm and a sense of agency in challenging situations.23 We observed a tremendous increase in the time needed for the brokers to navigate access to resources, to support public health measures and to relay information and education to community members in meaningful ways. Timely reflection and learning to inform action, along with building the right relationships in the different spheres for action, were necessary to support change in this complex situation. The MCHB used the knowledge created in this project to adjust its system-and community-level advocacy efforts, in addition to individual brokering with families in crisis.
The surge of COVID-19 in ethnocultural communities across North America, and the pandemic’s destabilizing effect on health care systems, has highlighted existing core issues with systemic structures that result in poorer health in ethnocultural communities. Consequently, creating a deeper shared understanding between people and systems must be made a priority for health and social care systems.4,6,8,10,44 Cultural brokering is crucial to this process, as it involves the following key elements: liaising or coming together to build holistic caring relationships; mobilizing knowledge of systems and people bidirectionally; mediation and building trust by clarifying misunderstandings of both systems and people to reduce cultural distance, which is predicated on safe relationships; and making change through action, through which both the individual and the system can be transformed.20,22
In their conceptual framework of integration, Ager and Strang45 point to social capital as the connective tissue between public outcomes (i.e., in health, education, employment and housing) and foundational citizenship rights, seen as the basis for “full and equal engagement within society.” They identify 3 types of social capital, namely social bonds (with family and coethnic groups), social bridges (with other communities) and social links (with structures of the state). The role of relational brokering, supported by smart public policy, is to help strengthen communities and families’ sense of security and ability to mobilize resiliency resources.
A lack of systematically collected data on race and ethnicity has challenged our understanding of the impact of COVID-19 on ethnocultural communities. The particular vulnerabilities of visible minority communities to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic demand the collection of disaggregated data. 9,44 Currently, coalitions of representatives from multicultural organizations, municipal and provincial governments, and the health system are working together to craft interventions aimed at mitigating the health and social impacts of COVID-19. A crucial aspect of this work will be to leverage existing community resources, such as trusted communication channels, cultural and social resources, to contextualize interventions for different communities. This will lead to more meaningful and sustainable interventions, since health interventions that are adapted for local contexts and community characteristics tend to be more effective than standard approaches.46,47
Limitations
We collected data on vulnerable members of ethnocultural populations in only 1 large urban centre in Canada. Although many findings may be relevant to other contexts, some may not because of contextual nuances. We used relatively new methods, implemented and adapted rapidly in a crisis situation to existing research infrastructures. Our use of SenseMaker data may illuminate only part of a complex story, highlighting opportunities for further study by other methods. More detailed qualitative work with conventional methods would be helpful to explore the themes uncovered in this study. However, our findings may help inform the design of interventions aimed at minimizing the harms of COVID-19 for ethnocultural communities. In this participatory action research study, data collection and analysis were done with members of the MCHB workers’ co-operative. Although many of the impacts may apply broadly to different groups of people in vulnerable circumstances, more impacts and nuances may be illuminated by expanding micronarrative collection to others working in service organizations focused on different community segments
Conclusion
The Illuminate Project has shown the entangled, systemic issues that result in poor health among people in vulnerable circumstances in ethnocultural communities, and the exacerbating impact of COVID-19, which also increased barriers to mitigation. Cultural brokering and community social capital were key supports for people in this crisis, and our findings can support policy and interventions that may reduce harm and support community resiliency.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank Anna Panagiotou and Prof. David Snowden for their helpful discussions on anthrocomplexity and SenseMaker for this project. The authors also acknowledge the work of Jordan Tate from the Physician Learning Program for the visualization of the research process.
Footnotes
Competing interests: Denise Campbell-Scherer reports participating on the Pfizer advisory panel on obesity, outside the submitted work. Yvonne Chiu is the executive director of the Multicultural Health Brokers Cooperative (MHBC) and acknowledges that MHBC relies on government grants for its operations and program delivery. Ali Mahdi, Aline Gayawira, Fransiska Awasis, Funke Olokude, Hannah Goa, Hina Syed, Judy Sillito, Lydia Yip, Lyn Belle, Mawien Akot, Monique Nutter, Nadia Farhat, Yan Wang, Niga Jalal, Saida Khalif, Shiva Chapagain, Stephanie Fernandez, Susan Azarcon, Zhewar Hama are employees of the MHBC. No other competing interests were declared.
This article has been peer reviewed.
Contributors: Denise Campbell-Scherer and Yvonne Chiu conceived the project idea. Denise Campbell-Scherer, Nicole Naadu Ofosu, Karen Heather Hunter, Yvonne Chiu designed the study methods. Denise Campbell-Scherer, Yvonne Chiu, Nicole Naadu Ofosu, Badi Jabbour, Sauleha Farooq, Ali Mahdi, Aline Gayawira, Fransiska Awasis, Funke Olokude, Hannah Goa, Hina Syed, Judy Sillito, Lydia Yip, Lyn Belle, Mawien Akot, Monique Nutter, Nadia Farhat, Yan Wang, Niga Jalal, Saida Khalif, Shiva Chapagain, Stephanie Fernandez, Susan Azarcon and Zhewar Hama created the data collection tools, supported data collection and contributed to the participatory data analysis. Denise Campbell-Scherer, Yvonne Chiu, Nicole Naadu Ofosu, Karen Heather Hunter, Badi Jabbour and Sauleha Farooq and supported the mixed-methods data analysis, with Karen Heather Hunter supporting the quantitative data analysis. Denise Campbell-Scherer, Yvonne Chiu, Nicole Naadu Ofosu, Thea Luig, Badi Jabbour, Sauleha Farooq, Karen Heather Hunter and Monique Nutter wrote the manuscript. All authors revised it critically for important intellectual content, gave final approval of the version to be published and agreed to be accountable for all aspects of the work. Denise Campbell-Scherer and Yvonne Chiu share joint first authorship.
Funding: This study was supported by the Illuminate Lab Associate Dean discretionary research funds, with in-kind support from the NOVAD Grant (University Hospital Foundation, Novo Nordisk, Alberta Economic Development and Trade) and from the Physician Learning Program (PLP). The PLP is funded by Alberta Health, supported by a financial contribution from the Government of Alberta. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent the official policy of the Government of Alberta.
Data sharing: These data are the product of a participatory research collaboration in a sensitive context that requires the engagement of peer researchers with lived experiences in interpretation of the data, as described. The authors do not feel it would be appropriate to share data beyond what has been vetted by the collaborative and is shared in the appendix.
- Accepted July 6, 2021.
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