Saskatchewan, Canada researchers to establish Indigenous-led centre focused on HIV rates among First Nations, Inuit & Métis

”Saskatchewan and (the province of) Manitoba have rich and diverse expertise in the areas of HIV, Hepatitis C and STBBIs (Sexually Transmitted Blood Borne Infections),” says Alexandra King, a doctor and lead investigator at the University of Saskatchewan College of Medicine, in the news release. (David Stobbe/University of Saskatchewan)
The Canadian Institutes of Health Research has awarded a federal grant to First Nations researchers at Canada’s University of Saskatchewan to establish an Indigenous-led centre devoted to addressing rising HIV rates among Inuit, First Nations and Métis.

The $2.84-million will be allocated over five years for the project.     

“The centre will develop a network of Indigenous researchers on HIV, Hepatitis C and sexually-transmitted infections in Canada and internationally, and address a gap in Indigenous academic leadership at the regional level,” said a news release from the University of Saskatchewan this month. 

Saskatchewan has the highest HIV diagnosis rate in Canada. The national rate is 6.5 per 100,000 people. In Saskatchewan, the rate is 15.5.

Indigenous people make up 4.9% of Canada’s population according the most recent 2016 national census. However, they make up 20.1 per cent of reported HIV cases. 

Almost 80 per cent of new HIV cases in Saskatchewan are among Indigenous people, the news release said.

A 2017 graphic presenting HIV statistics for Canada.
(Public Health Agency of Canada)

Indigenous and western worldviews and knowledge will be brought together in the work at the new centre, the news release said.

“This centre will provide the much-needed infrastructure to leverage the Indigenous and non-Indigenous researchers, clinicians, government, and community to work together to address the rise in HIV,” said Alexandra King, a doctor and lead investigator at the University of Saskatchewan College of Medicine, in the news release.

“This centre will employ the best of Indigenous and Western capabilities,” said King, also the who holds the University of Saskatchewan Cameco Chair in Indigenous Health and Wellness. “It will build approaches grounded in Indigenous philosophies and methodologies. For Indigenous people, place, history and social contexts matter and are integral to developing interventions that work.”

Centring Indigenous knowledge

The centre will also train Indigenous students to specialize in HIV care, prevention and treatment.

“Given colonialism and resulting historical trauma, Indigenous health and well-being has been interrupted, resulting in widespread disparities,” said Michelle Johnson-Jennings, Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Community-Engaged Research in the University of Saskatchewan’s College of Arts and Science, in the news release. “HIV/AIDS is just one of the disparities that has arisen.”

“Working in partnership with Indigenous communities, we hope to identify specific needs around HIV/AIDS prevention, testing and treatment and assist in building the infrastructure to lower these rates, which cannot be ignored.”

Focusing research on the Indigenous experience, instead of transferring western models to Indigenous realities, will be an important part of the approach, said Alex Wilson, academic director of the Aboriginal Education Research Centre at the University of Saskatchewan’s College of Education, in the news release.

“This research is significant not only because is it led by Indigenous people but also because it is grounded in Indigenous intellectual, spiritual and land knowledge,”  she said. “The educational component of the research will centre that knowledge, rather than centring Western knowledge and adding Indigenous.”

The University of Saskatoon is based in the western Canadian province of Saskatchewan. 

The location of the new centre  will be determined at a later date by researchers and Indigenous community members.

Write to Eilís Quinn at eilis.quinn(at)cbc.ca

Related stories from around the North:

Canada: Canadian Inuit organization releases strategy to eliminate TB by 2030, CBC News

Finland: Cancer rates in Arctic Finland below average, YLE News

Sweden: Fewer people suffering strokes in Sweden, Radio Sweden

United States: Alaska TB rate dips but still among the U.S. highest, Alaska Public Media

Eilís Quinn, Eye on the Arctic

Eilís Quinn is an award-winning journalist and manages Radio Canada International’s Eye on the Arctic news cooperation project. Eilís has reported from the Arctic regions of all eight circumpolar countries and has produced numerous documentary and multimedia series about climate change and the issues facing Indigenous peoples in the North.

Her investigative report "Death in the Arctic: A community grieves, a father fights for change," about the murder of Robert Adams, a 19-year-old Inuk man from Arctic Quebec, received the silver medal for “Best Investigative Article or Series” at the 2019 Canadian Online Publishing Awards. The project also received an honourable mention for excellence in reporting on trauma at the 2019 Dart Awards in New York City.

Her report “The Arctic Railway: Building a future or destroying a culture?” on the impact a multi-billion euro infrastructure project would have on Indigenous communities in Arctic Europe was a finalist at the 2019 Canadian Association of Journalists award in the online investigative category.

Her multimedia project on the health challenges in the Canadian Arctic, "Bridging the Divide," was a finalist at the 2012 Webby Awards.

Her work on climate change in the Arctic has also been featured on the TV science program Découverte, as well as Le Téléjournal, the French-Language CBC’s flagship news cast.

Eilís has worked for media organizations in Canada and the United States and as a TV host for the Discovery/BBC Worldwide series "Best in China."

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